Home :: Books :: Audiocassettes  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes

Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Law of Similars

The Law of Similars

List Price: $25.95
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 4 5 .. 7 >>

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not a guy's book
Review: This is not a guy's boook. The opening is a real downer, which is probably they chose to start the sample pages on page 17. Wish I had read that first, but it was recommended to me by a woman friend. Women will probably love this book, but it takes forever for the author to get into his story, and he is probably the wimpiest guy that ever passed for a hero in modern literature.
If you're looking for hard-biting legal stuff, this is not it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Engrossing and fun to read!
Review: As with all of Chris Bohjalian's novels, this one sucked me right in and kept me enthralled the whole way through. I love his use of words. Reading this book made me want wish that I could write like this. Bohjalian's characters are so interesting. This is a great and fun read.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Who's the narrator?
Review: Even if I could relate to Leland Fowler, I didn't like the fact that he told other people's stories through his own eyes, for example the wife of the guy who slips in a coma. Bohjalian is a gifted writer but this book just didn't move me.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great read and a deep story.
Review: Leland Fowler is an attorney trying to raise a small daughter after his wife dies in a tragic car accident. He discovers he has this cold of sorts, sore throat, headachy, flu type symptoms, that he has had virtually since the death of his wife. He tries all kinds of remedies and seems to be forever sucking on throat lozenges and cough drops. After his doctor is unable to help, Leland discovers Clarissa Lake, a homeopath. Though he has never tried such a thing and doesn't have any knowledge of how it works, he visits Clarissa in a last ditch effort to just feel better. At this point the story becomes a love story and a legal thriller, as one of Clarissa Lake's patients dies after allegedly taking her advice. Clarissa and Leland are thrust into a world of sudden mistrust and tragedy. It is a true test of love and patience, honor and values, for Clarissa and Leland, and Chris Bohjalian does an excellent job of providing us with an intense and deeply moving story. Don't miss this one.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Compelling
Review: This book was fantastic, and one I could not put down. Bohjalian is a talented writer who certainly does his research. While reading a gripping, fast paced, intriguing story, the reader can also pick up a few facts about homeopathy and medicine. The characters in this book gained my empathy, and they were incredibly well developed. I passed this book along to several people, and am eager to read more of Chris Bohjalian's work. The only reason I did not give this a 5 star rating is because I was not completely satisfied with the ending. It left some questions I'd have rather had answered with more pages.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sad and beautiful and worth every tear
Review: There's that old joke: "I laughed, I cried, it became a part of me." Well, the truth is I DID laugh when I was reading this, and I DID cry. I thought Leland was an honest, genuine, and fascinating narrator, and I really cherished the love story. And that ending? Wow. This was an exquisite experience.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good Medicine or Bad?
Review: This fast-moving novel of legal, medical, and ethical dilemas is hard to put down. The characters come alive as the plot thickens and we become enmeshed in the dramas of their lives. Leland Fowler, State Attorney and widower with a four-year-old daughter, meets Carissa Lake, a charming and lovely homeopath who not only cures Leland of his long time ills but who also falls in love with him. Homeopathy, a 200-year-old type of alternative medicine, plays a big part in the story that begins with alternative healing and ends with a unintended death. The question is whether the death is murder. What evoloves from that question is the focus of the book as legal ethics and moral compulsions vie for the top spot in both the office of the State Attorney and in the character's own lives. Definitely a page turner that you can't put down, this novel also sheds light on the field of homeopathy, and its authenticity, as well as on the human heart in all its many manifestations.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Disappointing
Review: A disappointing follow-up to "Midwives". The narrator rambled on for far too long and I found the characters unsympathetic. An interesting premise, but poor follow-through.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Disappointed!
Review: I was looking forward to reading this book and was greatly disappointed! The characters were flat, uninteresting, and I kept thinking that I had missed a few chapters - there was no time to develop an interest in the characters or plot!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: SIMILAR IS THE OPERATIVE WORD...
Review: This is a very well written book, though a little disconcerting in its thematic similarity to the author's previous novel, "Midwives", which is the superior of the two. Yet again, the medical and legal professions are in some conflict, and it makes for some interesting, though questionable, moral choices.

Here, a widowed prosecuting attorney, Leland Fowler, the single parent of a young child, is living in a rural town in Vermont. Not having felt well for months, he visits the town's resident homeopath and finds himself feeling better, both physically and emotionally, because the homeopath, Clarissa Lake, is just what the doctor ordered.

Shortly after Clarissa and Leland connect, a patient of hers goes into anaphylactic shock, digresses into a coma and dies, ostensibly after eating cashews to which he was allergic, after a casual conversation with Clarissa and a belief in the homeopathic law of similars that like cures like. Leland, emotionally involved with Clarissa, becomes embroiled in a covert attempt to shield her from the legal repercussions that he knows could follow such a tragedy, even though it might not have been entirely of her making. It is here that the book unravels a bit.

This ethical digression on the part of Leland is somewhat difficult to believe, as he had had a very brief relationship with Clarissa. It is almost inconceivable that he would chance losing his entire professional future and the security which his profession provides his small daughter to engage in a major ethical breach. A breach so serious, that were it to come to light, would almost certainly result in his probable disbarrment from the practice of law. Needless to say, this decision by him ultimately affects their relationship in a way not foreseen by Leland.

Nonetheless, the book is somewhat absorbing and well worth reading.


<< 1 2 3 4 5 .. 7 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates