Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Poetic, funny, heartwrenching; a MUST-READ for all women! Review: "Talk Before Sleep" celebrates women's friendship with some of the most poetic and touching language you'll ever read! In each scene as Ruth, Ann, and assorted other women friends gather for Ruth's final weeks, you'll laugh, fight, and ache along with each of them. When the inevitable does come, you'll cry for Ruth as you would for any of the women you hold dear in your "real life." This is a truly moving story, made even more satisfying by Berg's exceptional writing. It will dare you to think about possibilities you'd never have imagined before, and as a result, you'll appreciate your friends, your sisters, your mother SO much more after reading it. Gift-giving was easy last Christmas: I gave a copy of this book to every woman I know!
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: A Pull On Your Emotions Review: Berg never ceases to amaze me.... 'Talk Before Sleep' is like having a conversation as you read. You are drawn into the book believing you are just one of Ruth's friends who is there to support her through until the end. Ruth has terminal breast cancer. Ann, Ruth's best friend and former nurse, has resolved that she is going to beside her friend until she dies. Ann and Ruth are nothing alike but are drawn to one another because of their differences. Sarah is there to keep a level head and make sure all 'final' arrangements get made. She takes her task seriously and in doing so sometimes alienates herself from the others, particularly L.D.. L.D. is Ruths friend who refuses to believe Ruth is dying and in doing so has Ruth trying every non conventional treatment she can find, all the while getting on everyone nerves who is trying to come to terms with reality. Then there is Helen who has known Ruth since childhood and is just a sweet gentle soul wanting just to be there for Ruth. This book drew from all of my emotions, I laughed out loud, I cried, and got angry. It is a good read that can pull on all of those emotions and when you close the book you are so glad you have shared the experiece with Ruth, Sarah, L.D., and Helen.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Good read; tough subject Review: This story will make you think about a subject we really don't like to. Solely because of its subject matter, the story is sad but the strength of the bond of friendship is inspiring. The writer present a well composed piece of work, easy to read in its structure. Worth reading!
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: How does one cope with Death of a loved one? Review: Elizabeth Berg's TALK BEFORE SLEEP is the story of a friendship. Ruth is dying from cancer, and her best friend Ann is trying to cope. We see things mostly through the eyes of Ann. Through flashbacks we find out how they met, how they felt about each other and what brought them together. Both are married and both have a child, but each of them are like night and day. Ruth lived life to the fullest and always took risks. Ann seemed to be the more conservative of the two, but that didn't stop them from being friends. The book was about how Ann and Ruth's other closest friends helped Ruth and each other prepare for her death. Be prepared for a lot of tears, especially by the end of the book. I felt that this was probably one of my favorite Elizabeth Berg books, and as usual, I was not let down.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Poetic, funny, heartwrenching; a MUST-READ for all women! Review: "Talk Before Sleep" celebrates women's friendship with some of the most poetic and touching language you'll ever read! In each scene as Ruth, Ann, and assorted other women friends gather for Ruth's final weeks, you'll laugh, fight, and ache along with each of them. When the inevitable does come, you'll cry for Ruth as you would for any of the women you hold dear in your "real life." This is a truly moving story, made even more satisfying by Berg's exceptional writing. It will dare you to think about possibilities you'd never have imagined before, and as a result, you'll appreciate your friends, your sisters, your mother SO much more after reading it. Gift-giving was easy last Christmas: I gave a copy of this book to every woman I know!
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Written in classic Berg style Review: In 'Talk Before Sleep' Elizabeth Berg displays the dynamics of the female friendship in such a moving and realistic way that this could be a true story, only it's not. Berg explains that she wrote the story to help sort out her experiences during her own friend's death, and this connection between herself and her characters keeps them real and alive. You will not often find a book in which the characters so confidently propel the story forward. Ruth is dying of caner, it's plain and simple. Though she toys with the idea of 'curing' herself, it's pretty apparent that she will be leaving her friends before she should have to. But like so many of Berg's books, this story is really about Ann, Ruth's maternally-inclined friend, who temporarily sacrifices her husband and daughter to care for Ruth in her home. While Ann is waiting on Ruth hand and foot (emotionally, physically and medically) there is plenty of time for flashbacks that take the reader through the women's friendship; through divorces and children and all the messy stuff that life is made of. While Ruth's other friends also play intricate parts in the story, the focus really is on Ann and what she will choose to retain from her friendship with Ruth and this phase of her life. Even though the subject is somewhat grim, I enjoyed reading this book. One thing that is always consistent in Berg's writing is that she doesn't skip over the less-attractive parts of the human nature, so when you're reading you find yourself easily relating to one or more of her characters. Reading is so often such a solitary thing, but when it becomes interactive it stays with you.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Berg doesn't take the easy road Review: She could EASILY have seduced us into tears with just the death of the character. But, no, Berg is much too good to resort to that. She lets her reader fall as in love with the dying woman as the friend telling the story. We grieve her loss as deeply as if it were someone we knew. This is more the story of female friendship than it is about cancer. And it is very well done. Just an excellent book all the way around.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: The laughter and intimacy of women¿s friendship Review: The fact that one of the two main characters is dying of breast cancer doesn't set the tone of this book by prolific Elizabeth Berg; it just puts the friendship between these women in sharp focus and makes us prize them even more. Although in the hands of another author, the dissimilar characters of Talk Before Sleep might become stereotypical caricatures, Berg does not succumb to this pitfall. All the characters have realistically sympathetic as well as irritating qualities. Although lovers, husbands, and children are important elements that receive their fair share of page time, it is the supreme depth of friendship between women that is honored in this lovely book. It's a quality that men rarely experience, share, or even understand. Read this book - and then make a donation to breast cancer research.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: A story of women's friendships in the shadow of cancer Review: As the book opens, Ann prepares to leave for the home of her best friend, Ruth, who has breast cancer. By the time the book begins, Ruth has already been through treatment and there is nothing more that the doctors can do for her, but through flashbacks, we discover not only the story of Ruth's diagnosis but also the development of Ann and Ruth's amazing friendship. The story is told from Ann's perspective, but the book also features several of Ruth's other friends, which gives the reader a window into how a group of diverse women might react to a friend's illness: Ann, confused by unfailingly loyal and supportive; LD., the tough one who refuses to believe that Ruth's situation is hopeless; Sarah, the practical one who takes flack from the others; and Helen, Ruth's childhood friend. The characters are very real, and the various aspects of the story ring true, from Ruth's confusion over her marriage to the reactions of Ann's school-age daughter. An enjoyable book about love, loss, and--most importantly--women's friendships.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: I love Elizabeth Berg! Review: Do you have an author that you continually go back to, like an old friend or comfort food...somebody who makes you feel good, even when the subject matter is about divorce, dying, or sickness. For me, that author is Elizabeth Berg. "Talk Before Sleep" is about girlfriends loving one another, even when the situation is intolerable, unbearable, unspeakable. Ruth is diagnosed w/cancer and her friends gather around her like lionesses protecting their cub...comforting her, laughing with her, feeding her chocolate. Berg writes as if she is sitting across the table from you at dinner, and we are nodding yes, yes. We understand. Because we have girl-friends like the characters in her books. We have girl-friends that we would dread not to have in our lives, to love and pour our souls out to. "I will miss you." Ann crys. "You will feel me near an open window," Ruth says. "I will be the breeze that brushes against your face." ---Talk Before Sleep--- I keep going back to Berg because her words taste good...I know her characters. They are people I know. They are me.
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