Rating: Summary: A Superb Novel! Review: Now that we can edit our Amazon reviews, here is an update on the novel The SHIPPING NEWS, which I first reviewed on February 27, 2000. Today, I want to add that the book, a mid-life story, is most suitable for readers over the age of thirty-five or forty. It is the reader with life experience who will best empathize with the main character's plight and, therefore, find the story irresistable. THE SHIPPING NEWS by E.Annie Proulx (1993) is one of the finest novels I have ever read. Proulx's unique writing style serves up the utterly compelling story of one man's (Quoyle) odyssey from lackluster career, depression, and despair into a brighter tomorrow where success, self-esteem, and love finally becken in mid-life. This sometimes dark, literary journey, written in a remarkable style that paints vivid word images, will immerse the reader into every emotion! As the story progresses, Quoyle and his tiny family move from the U.S. to an old family home, in need of TLC, located in Newfoundland (where the author has lived, by the way). It is a distinctive, historic house, anchored to rocks by great chains that defend against ocean winds and storms! Quoyle goes to work in a reporting job with the local newspaper called THE SHIPPING NEWS. Readers will enjoy Proulx's realistic word portrait of Newfoundland landscapes and culture. The author expertly reveals Newfoundland life via wonderful, believable characters and settings as Quoyle makes various contacts throughout the community in pursuit of the latest disaster story! You see, it is his job to cover all of the bad news: accidents, fires, deaths, and so forth! OF course, a couple of mysteries occur along the way. Surprises occur in every twist and turn of this stunning work. Always central is Quoyle and his determination to take care of his small family by succeeding in a new culture. Certainly, only a superior writer could present Quoyle's tale in such magical passages. No wonder this novel won the Pulitzer Prize in 1994! Quoyle's life journey reminds us that every person has worth and that truly great stories arise out of everyday circumstances! This novel is detailed, somewhat dark, somewhat naturalistic, but, most of all, it is reassuring in it's humanity. I recommend it to those willing to be fully immersed in the story to the very end! A note to those who like to speed their way through novels: the first three or four chapters necessarily inform the reader about the main character's eccentric personality and predicaments. Then the story takes off as the family moves to New Foundland. I have not yet seen the movie that was made of this novel because I have read the novel twice! I can only say that I am sorry the film, THE SHIPPING NEWS, wasn't better received. Some books are harder to translate into films than others. Often, reading the book first is essential to understanding the movie. For example, another such book/movie was DUNE. Though the DUNE movie was actually well-done on a number of levels, it's complexity was better understood if the viewer had read the book first! Even if you did not like the movie, do read THE SHIPPING NEWS by E. Annie Proulx, when you get the chance! I highly recommend it!
Rating: Summary: Well-written and uplifting Review: This book was amazing. At first I was taken aback by the short, abrupt sentences, but as I read, the style fit so well with the characterization and with Newfoundland itself. Proulx's voice is effective in that she can say so much with so few words. Some segments I had to read two or three times, because they said so much with so little, and in reading them over, I found so many different meanings hidden within. Quoyle is a testimony to the human spirit and all the good that can encompass a person who has an open heart. His character is truly one of the most honest and most loving. I would highly recommend this book as an uplifting and complete portrayal of the human spirit moving forward despite all odds.
Rating: Summary: an inspiration Review: I was very happy with the way the book worked out -- I found Quoyle's denseness at the beginning very difficult in a protagonist, but I stuck with him through the hard beginning and was rewarded with the vision of his slow and steady maturation. I even have my doubts about whether such profound changes are realistic, but finally, I think, one realizes that this character is EAP's gift to her readership, for us to mock at first, perhaps, and then cheer on, but eventually to empathize with, since we could all use a little more gumption in our lives, a little more courage, and a little less drifting with life's tides. Of course, the language and descriptions are luminescent, and one could profitably read the book for those alone.
Rating: Summary: A real snoozer Review: Rarely do I put a book down without finishing it. But the characters in this book are utterly without depth. Cardboard cutouts. I can't take it anymore.
Rating: Summary: Most Excellent! Review: This is a story of starting over. In the bleakness of the setting (physical and emotional), the main character finds warmth in his new beginnings and acceptance in this small community. Most importantly, he finds and accepts "love without pain." A heartwarming, beautifully written novel! This is one of my most favorite books!
Rating: Summary: A Pathetic character without redemption Review: I had no sympathy for Quoyle or his situation. He seemed to be someone letting the tide of life carry him along, not an active participant. I found him pathetic with few redeeming qualities. An unsympathetic character made this book hard to read and not very enjoyable.
Rating: Summary: As drab and dreary a read as the landscape it describes Review: This is one of the worst books I have read in a long time. Its landscape is bleak, its characters are bleaker, and its plot non-existant. A chore to read, a relief to put down.
Rating: Summary: magical Review: This is one of, or perhaps the best of the books I've read. I read about three books a week. I am 40 years old. Do the math yourself. If you like books that are slightly off-beat, beautifully written (almost lyrical), and totally engaging, the odds are you will love this book.
Rating: Summary: The Shipping News Review: I began this book with high expectations. I was let down quickly. I stuck with the book and finished it, only to feel empty in the end. I had high hopes for the characters, especially Quoyle and his life struggles. However, a FEW interesting characters, and beautiful descriptions of Newfoundland were all I came away with. I felt as if the E. Annie Proulx chose to stop writing this book rather than ending it. Of course, how do you wrap up a novel that has no story. I would have given this book only one star had it not been for some of the characters. Perhaps this would have been a better book written as a series of short stories involoving these characters.
Rating: Summary: A rich read Review: I went back to school as an "adult returning to study" and this is one of the books I HAD to read. At first I wondered how I was going to like a character that was so physically repulsive, but I ended up LOVING him. What a character Proulx has "birthed"; so real. Then I wondered how I was going to read a book where the author wrote in a fashion that was so "different". This has ended up to be my favourite book, because of the richness of its characters, the overwhelming setting of Newfoundland ... the atmosphere. I also love the way Proulx writes with her staccato sentences emphasising three words with their own short sentence; or a character whose whole conversation may go for two pages. My only disappointment is that Proulx hasn't written another like it. I have never read a book more than once (too many books ... too little time) ... but this one I have, and I will again.
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