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Lucky

Lucky

List Price: $35.00
Your Price: $23.10
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Lucky Pick, A Great Read!
Review: After reading Lovely Bones, it seemed nearly impossible to have another moving emotional book such as that by the same author, but after reading Lucky I was truly amazed. Lucky begins with the tragic event of rape that Alice Sebold encounters and continues into her struggle afterwards. The detail that Sebold reaches through this novel allows the reader to get somewhat of an understanding of this traumatic experience and difficult journey she began after rape. After reading this book the perspective on society takes a different outlook because Lucky allows the reader to realize how hard society is on people because of what people have heard. Lucky goes further into detail of events that occur after her rape, even with such a difficult subject. Sebold does an amazing job with expressing her emotions and experiences through her long struggle.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hard To Put Down
Review: Through a devastating rape and the ordeal to follow comes a courageous read from a fantastic author. Alice Seabold, best known for her novel, "Lovely Bones" has served us well with this telling memoir of painful emotions and difficult occurances that led her to the point of coming full circle.
As of late, I have been in bed rest due to a broken knee and have had the pleasure of reading some of the most riveting books I could have only imagined.
"Lucky" is one of thos books as well as Nightmares Echo, A Paper Life and Running With Scissors. Each are courageous reads with powerful healing journeys.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Lucky Review
Review: When Alex Sebold was eighteen, enrolled as college freshman at Syracuse University, she was attacked and raped on the last night of school walking home late at night. She was forced onto the ground in a dark tunnel "among the dead leaves and broken beer bottles." She gives descriptive details of the rape and its immediate aftermath inside the dorm, while at the police station, and at home with her parents. After going to the police she was informed that the same place where she had been raped there had been the murder of a different young woman, and was also raped. Alex Sebold considered herself very lucky. Thus as a writer she decided to share her life altering experience. Changing the names of all characters for privacy, this book was non the less very, very moving.

Alice Sebold not only wrote through this book about how she overcame her rape and was able to survive it. She also gave the her audience a certain amount of knowledge of the real world and the dangers that come along with it. It is an amazingly well written book. A memoir is self-centered descripted work. She wrote in a sense for herself, victims who have encountered the same situation or a very similar situation. I have not read her other book, The Lovely Bones, but after reading this very moving book I am curious of what The Lovely Bones could do to move me like this one did.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Male's Perspective
Review: Straight away, let me mention that I also read The Lovely Bones; my opinion of that book was that it was contrived; after the first 60 pages it didn't really work for me.

Now this book: Very Impressive! This is a tough story to tell and the author did a great job. The voice is authentic and the details make it real, and I learned alot: i.e. how men convicted of rape usually beat the rap. (I didn't know this; thought in fact the opposite was true!) Hang on through the entire book. The beginning is violent and intense -- and you may want to turn away or put it down -- don't! Keep reading. You heart will go out to this young woman, as my heart did. Keep reading, even through the later sections, the trial which, for me, was toughest part because it almost reads like a court transcription.

Now the kicker. Right when you think the book is over and you think the protagonist (or the author) is a "winner" -- pow! -- flashforward to the East Village years later. Here you'll see how although she managed to convict her rapist, she hasn't managed to put the entire event behind her. This is not a Hollywood ending. The protagonist/author experiences an aftershock of fear and self-loathing that she is unable to control, that pursues her even into another city, even years later; she can't seem to escape it. This epilogue is what really made me love this book. Life goes on, yes -- but misfortune sometimes takes a huge chunk of our spirit. And yet you must still go on! This book is a tribute to a true survivor, a book about real life; it now has a permanent place in my library. I recommend it strongly for those of you not afraid of entering the darkness, even for a moment; sometimes you need to enter the darkness in order to appreciate the light. I feel as if this book will stay with me a long time -- now that's great art! Along with this memoir, another book I'd like to recommend -- a much lighter, funnier book ('cause we all need to laugh too, my God) -- is The Losers' Club by Richard Perez. Quite sweet and haunting, too; a comedy with a soul.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Astonishing writing
Review: "Lucky" is a stunning, grueling account of the rape Sebold experienced as a college freshman. Sebold spares herself and us no detail in describing the rape and its devastating aftermath on her and everyone she knew. It is an incredibly courageous and honest piece of work, and, in my view, vastly superior to the much-lauded "Lovely Bones," which I thought spun out of control in the second half. Sebold is unsparing of herself and her dysfunctional family, but the one area she leaves unexplored is the end of an important friendship with a college classmate who is also raped, probably in retaliation for Sebold's decision to press charges against her attacker. This is a minor issue in a work that is a must-read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Very lucky
Review: Lucky by Alice Sebold is a very good and emotional book. It is about a girl (Alice) who was an 18 when year old college freshman, attending Syracuse University to study poetry. After a party Alice was walking back to her dorm when she was forced off a park path, pulled into a tunnel and then brutally raped. The rape not only changed Alices life, but the rest of her families life and the people she knew as well. After the rape Alice went to the hospital to get checked out and get evidence if she chose to go to trial. It turned out that Alice had been beat up pretty bad and because of that she decided to go to trial and prove that her rapist, Madison, guilty. Going to trial was not only to make Alice feel safer, but to keep Madison from doing it again. After going through two pre-trials Alice finally got to go to the real trial that would determine if Madison was guilty or not. The trial lasted a few days, and on the last day Alice was asked to testify. She was asked many hard and grousome questions about the rape that she did not want to answer. After the long excruciating pain of the trial Madison was found guilty and was sent to prison.

A few months after the trial Alice began to get her life back on track, but then another devistating event happened in her life. Alices best friend, Lila, was raped. After Lilas rape Alice went into a total meltdown mode and was not able to recover from it for many years.

Lucky is an excellent book. The way Alice Sebold wrote about her rape made you feel like you knew exactly what she was feeling. It is a very grousome book and will make you think about what is going on until the late hours of the night. Lucky is a book that really keeps you interested and wanting to read more. I recommend this book to anyone who likes suspense, and doesn't mind a very detailed, grousome book. It is a must read book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: So Lucky
Review:
There are several books out there at the moment that tell the truth without sensationalising what really happens during any time of abuse to a child/teen. Rape is a form of abuse, no less than child abuse,incest,or molestation. This book, LUCKY, and then NIGHMARES ECHO and A CHILD CALLED IT. If you have a chance to read the three books you will come away with the understanding of the mind of the victim and the difficulty in overcoming what is put upon thier shoulders. More than that, you realize just how fragile a childs life is and yet they have more courage and determination to survive than many of the people I know that have never dealt with a terrible past. I belive this book stands out, it is extrememly well done without going overboard. The emotions are strong. Extremely good book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Very moving
Review: I read Lucky for my senoir english class and really enjoyed it. It is brutal and honest, and would help any reader better understand rape and what happens to a person who experiences such a horrible thing. It is very well written and riveting

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: "Lucky", By Alice Sebold
Review: After reading ,"The Lovely Bones", I felt i understood Alice Sebold's style of writing. However, she managed to amaze me once again with her memoir,"Lucky". The idea of being raped is inconceivable to me, but her vivd detail and precise recollections of her horrible experience, allows the reader to at least begin to understand what she must have gone through. I never put the book down. The book Started off with chilling accounts of the night her rape happened, and continued intriguing the reader. The events in the book held my attention at all times. I also admire Alice Sebold for her courage and ability to share her rape experience with the world. In the book, she remained so incredibly strong, even at times where she could have easily just given up her struggle to find and send her rapist to prison. Her family in the memoir was very paculiar. Alice seemed to always be the care-giver for them, even though she was the one who needed to be taken care of after her rape. While I know her parents cared about what happened to her, they seem to still be wrapped up in their own world, and their own agendas. I particularly loved Alice's cut-to-the-chase attitude, and her hatred for being pitied. She wanted to be treated as a normal human being, not as a lost cause, just because she had been raped. I also admired her ability to carry on and try new relationships with other men, even after her rape. I give this book four stars ,and recommend this book to everyone , since everyone can learn from Sebold's experience, and can sympathize to what she must have been feeling at the time. If you liked "The Lovely Bones", you'll love "Lucky".


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