The Storyteller 

  • Home
  • About
  • Author Blog

Review of book The Girl on the Swing by Ali Cooper

12/06/2011

0 Comments

 
Though this book insinuated itself onto my Kindle – nudging aside a couple of others ahead of it on my to-be-read pile -  at a very busy time, it engaged me from the beginning and I could barely put it down. 

Largely narrative and written in first person present tense, the writing was beautiful, the settings well rendered and the protagonist believable and real.

While there is an underlying theme of reincarnation in the book, it is rather a story of one woman’s struggle to find meaning in life again after the tragic loss of her only child. She feels estranged from her husband and very alone in her
grief.

Julia is an obstetrician from a middle class background; her ambitious husband from a stiff-upper-lip aristocratic family. She is finally getting ready to return to work when a wrongful death lawsuit is brought against her and she is forced to take an extended leave from her profession. This sends her spiralling down again. She begins to have unsettling visions of a past life. She dares not mention these to her husband and when she does so to her psychologist friend, it is suggested she keep busy doing volunteer work. 
 
Julia decides to try it out and through a twist of fate ends up visiting a prisoner who is in jail for murder. There is an eerie connection with this man and the story begins to take some skillfully written, surprising twists and turns. 

There were a few loose threads around minor characters that could have been tidied up, but we come to know and like most of them well enough for the story. Near the ending there is an unexpected twist that stirs Julia out of her fog a bit and helps her face the uncertainty of her future, and a further lovely bittersweet turn that offers promise of resolution and hope.

The Girl on the Swing is literary fiction with a compelling storyline. A most enjoyable read with a touch of suspense and mystery, and one I will remember for a very long time...

4 stars out of 5!

Add Comment
 

Review: Threads: The Reincarnation of Anne

07/29/2011

0 Comments

 
I began this book not knowing what to expect. I’d been wanting to read it ever since being introduced to the story. Since reincarnation is a big theme in The
Storyteller
 I purchased the book because it was so highly regarded.
 
I needn’t have worried. One would have thought the book had been written by a much more seasoned writer than the author. It was beautifully done. The beginning of the book was a long narrative as Anne contemplated her life with Henry from her place in ‘the memories’.
 A couple of times it verged on being draggy as Anne played out her emotions, but the emotions and thoughts were so well imagined and wrought that the reader was always pulled back in. 

In her ruminations, Anne brings us some
colourful vignettes of other lives lived. Throughout there are woven in bits of philosophy so skilfully done one hardly notices. 
  
There were one or two concepts that I did
not share with the story, but beliefs are only that after all and Anne’s truths seemed very real in the telling. 

Threads is not a quick read. It is a work of literature whose threads are to be savoured
and pondered. I truly believe this story could become a classic. 

I am delighted to so quickly have found such a quality work on Kindle. Threads shall remain archived on my Kindle forever in my ‘Private Library’ collection.

I highly recommend all my readers buy this book. It is wonderfully written and is pretty close to how I believe reincarnation works.

Threads is available on Kindle or in paperback from Amazon.
Add Comment
 

    Archives

    January 2012
    December 2011
    October 2011
    September 2011
    August 2011
    July 2011
    June 2011
    May 2011
    April 2011
    March 2011
    February 2011
    January 2011
    December 2010
    November 2010
    October 2010
    September 2010
    August 2010
    July 2010
    June 2010

    Categories

    All
    10 10 10
    2012
    Adventure
    Baby Boomers
    Belief
    Blessings
    Book Review
    Book Reviewing
    Boomer Lit
    Christmas Dinner
    Clairvoyance
    Cover
    Death
    Definite Purpose
    Dialogue
    Early Departure
    Facebook
    Faeries
    Faith
    Family
    First Post
    Freedom
    Friendship
    Good People
    Gratitude
    Health
    Intuition
    Kindle
    Kismet
    Launch
    Life
    Love
    Magical
    Mastermind Teams
    Music
    New Age
    New Era
    New Life
    Numerology
    Past Lives
    Peace
    Pennies From Heaven
    Philosophical Musings
    Pix
    Publishing
    Reincarnation
    Secret
    Seeking
    Spa
    Spiritual Laws
    Sports
    Thanksgiving
    Things I Wish I Had Said
    Transformation
    Vancouver
    Violins
    Wonder

    RSS Feed

    Author

    Sharon was born an Intuitive. We all are, most of us just don't realize it. Sharon did the human thing and started out a serial entrepreneur. Serial because she was always searching. Until one day not long after 9-11 she was forced to close a business - the only 'failure' she'd ever had. She was devastated. She lost her way. Of course she did not know it at the time but the truth was she had really found her way... to her truth, to her calling. She had always had a thirst for knowledge and a knowing at an early age that religion as we knew it did not ring true for her. How could God be loving and forgiving if He issued all those 'punishments' He was purported to have committed. Sharon began to doubt God even existed at all, so she embarked upon a search for the truth. And the truth for her is certainly God does exist, only not as a Man but as Source, the Universe, Spirit, whatever one wants to call it. The other thing Sharon had always known was that she was a writer. After she closed her store, she began to study in earnest and put pen to paper. She wrote several 'practice' books. And then one day, as she was lying in bed in an alpha or theta state, she's never certain which, she was informed that she must write 'that' book. The one she'd always had inside her. She resisted, but you know the old saw, the more she resisted the more it persisted. It seemed a massive undertaking and she doubted she could do it. She wasn't ready, she had other projects on the go, she couldn't afford the time. But she was compelled to write the book, pure and simple. She found herself making notes on her mini recorder at all odd hours of the day and night. Books, interviews, people found their way to her. Mediums would suddenly pop up out of nowhere and give her a 'reading' as if it were the most natural thing in the world.  
    As was meant, Sharon found her way again while writing this book, and it is her fondest hope that in some small way, it may help the reader find theirs too.  


Website design Two Moons