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Map of the World

Map of the World

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Map of the World
Review: A Map of the World, by Jane Hamilton was an excellent book with vivid detail and extreme emotion. I would give this book five stars. It captured me, intrigued me, and helped me feel as though I had known these people all my life. The first reason that I give this book five stars is that the author paints an amazing picture of a person stricken with a nervous breakdown. Just before accusations begin coming forth about Alice's sexual abuse cases, she was watching her neighbor's little girl, Lizzy. Alice went upstairs to find her bathing suit to go to the family pond, and while she is doing that, Lizzy heads down to the pond and drowns. The beginning of the story is grief stricken and very emotional. Alice, eventually has a nervous breakdown because she blames herself for the death of her best friend's child. The author captures her grief, terror and astonishment at the event surrounding Lizzy's death that you feel as though it was a part of you also. I thought the author did a wonderful job of creating a very real experience for the reader. The main character, Alice, is falsely accused of sexual abuse. She lives with her husband and their two small children on a farm in a little town. Their family has no way to pay the bail to get her out of jail until her trial, so she has to remain imprisoned until the trial. The story alternates from her husband's point of view, and Alice's perception of the action. It creates a vibrant image of the entire family's perspective by examining all positions. You feel as if you get to know the whole family, not only Alice. The last reason that I enjoyed the book so much is because of all the action involved. It doesn't seem as though there would be all that much action, but there is! Alice describes many scenes from her days in the county jail, and even gets into quite a brawl with one of her cellmates. At home, Howard continues to try to run the farm by himself, but is failing. He decides to sell the farm and release Alice from jail. The whole time the author is building up to a breaking point, not only in Alice's case, but also the relationship between Howard and Alice. Again, the author touched me in her masterful writing and way with words. It is an incredible read, and I encourage you to try it.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Sometimes less is more
Review: I recently finished reading this book and have mixed feelings about it. I have to give Jane Hamilton a great deal of credit for tastefully tackeling such a delicate and controversial topic. The main charactor Alice chronicles the horrors of being accused of an utterly reprehensible crime. The author was able to write about this event without the use of any gratuitus descriptions or gory details. I especially enjoyed the court scenes and how her lawyer worked hard to protray the child Robbie as petulant and manipulative. You could see that Robbie was also horribly victomized during the trial.

Jane Hamilton's descriptive writing is what makes her stand out as such an accomplished author. However, I felt that perhaps there was too much description in this novel. Even the most mundane and ordinary tasks warrented too many details and narration. There were times that I skipped a few paragraphs and scanned the words to get to the meat of the story. I am glad that I read the book and feel that I learned a great deal of family dynamics and communication breakdowns during tragic times. Sometimes when it comes to getting a readers attention I feel that less description is more.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Can't finish
Review: I can't finish the book. There are parts of good writing by the author but the story is unnecessarily draggy and depressing. Alice always just look at the negative side of things, bemoaning her life and that people around her has robbed her of something. For example, she would notice how ugly a person is than anything else. I find her attitude to Nellie particularly selfish and rude. Her daughters are supposed to be difficult to handle, yet Nellie has helped her while she drowns herself in self-pity. I just feel that I have better way to spend my time than to read and feel annoyed and depressed about Alice's life.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: As good as it gets, from one of the best.
Review: If you are up for a quick, glossy read, do not pick up this book. If you are looking for an intensely detailed and brilliantly composed tale of human loss and discovery - this is the book for you!

Jane Hamilton has an amazing gift for creating layer upon layer of depth for her characters. She leaves nothing to chance or guesswork. In "A Map of the World," the reader follows the perfectly detailed journey into despair of Alice Goodheart. At the same time, we witness the plight of her good-hearted and painfully stoic husband, Howard. We see the end result of tragedy through the eyes of two very different people who must fight through adversity every day just to survive with their family intact. Hamilton's recounting of her characters' plight is incredibly well thought out and presented. And their story is utterly unforgettable, and frighteningly real.

Jane Hamilton is perhaps the most gifted writer of our time, and "A Map of the World" may be her finest work.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A great writer, but a great book?
Review: Evaluating "A Map of the World" is a little bit tricky for me because while I did not particularly enjoy the novel, I cannot say that there is anything wrong with it. In fact, there is quite a bit right with it. Hamilton's prose is frequently dead-on, and her descriptions of the memories and emotional experiences of her main characters is often insightful, funny, and fully engaging. On top of that she has a great plot. Our main character, Alice, suffers from one disaster after another: first the 2-year-old daughter of her best friend drowns in Alice's back yard, and next she is arrested on hyperbolic charges of sexually abusing the students at the elementary school where she works as a nurse.

So what's my problem? I think Hamilton simply gives us too much of a good thing. There were too many reflections and flashbacks and emotional observations for my taste. And I am willing to believe that my problems are a matter of taste. I've read Amazon reviews for books where the reader will complain that the writer drones on and on incessantly, yet I might have loved the voice in that novel and not particularly cared if the writing seemed long winded. It wasn't the case here, however.

I do think that Hamilton's characterizations are superb, though her dialogue is sometimes stilted and distracting. Nevertheless, I would certainly take another pass at a novel by her.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Difficult Read.
Review: One moment of inattention, or was it pure and simply an accident that could have happened to anyone? Whatever it was, the lives of a community were changed and the dreams of two families went up in smoke. One of them found a way to continue their lives, but for the other family, they spiraled into a life of emotional poverty. The frightening lesson in this book is that it is hard to imagine that any of us would be immune to this disaster. It could probably happen to practically anyone, and just its possibility opens up the fact of our vulnerabilities. It made me think that I was on a precipice or a knife edge, facing disaster with just a misstep as I tried to go about my daily, routine tasks.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A Map of the World
Review: Although it has its good moments, the book, A Map of the World, is a difficult one to finish. In the first place, the book is unnecessarily long. Secondly, the characters are, without exception, unsympathetically drawn. The story is told in first person narration by the two main characters, Alice Goodwin and her husband, Howard.

Alice, the mother of two small children, works part time as a elementary school nurse. The book begins with Alice bitterly complaining about her children, her husband, her neighbors and her life in general. Alice was a motherless child who had a difficult relationship with her father. Within the first few chapters, the reader figures out that Alice is subconsciously hell-bent on causing problems for herself and her family.

While babysitting her best friend's two preschoolers, Alice leaves the room where the children are playing with Alice's own two small children and allows herself to become wrapped up in a daydream. By the time Alice returns, her friend's two year-old has wandered out the door and drowns in a pond. Alice descends into despair. She pushes her husband away and neglects her daughters.

Alice has always had a knack for alienating others. The death of the little girl turns into a catalyst for accusations that Alice has sexually molested several neghborhood children. Alice is arrested and is financially unable to make bail.

With Alice's arrest, the book makes a sudden shift to Howard's first person narration. In stark contrast to Alice, Howard is an uncomplaining, balanced and satisfied person who sees good in everything. However, he is completely unable to cope with changes brought about by his wife's imprisonment. He, too, begins making some very bad choices with devastating consequences.

Alice spends the majority of the book wallowing in self-pity and directing anger at others. She openly resents her own five year-old and says almost nothing in the book's twenty-two chapters to indicate that she loves her family. Although I can understand what the author was trying to accomplish, such an unsympathetic portrayal of the main character becomes irritating after a while. The plot consists of one disastrous turn after another. Eventually, you just want the story to come to an end.

The characters do grow through their experience, making the final chapter worthwhile. Getting to that final worthwhile chapter, however, is painful.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Profound portrait of forgiveness and the complexities of Luv
Review: I got so much from this book. It didn't really bring up thought but more of a feeling. I just felt when I read. It touched me deeply. The way the author could draw such a profound portrait of three people was just amazing! The story is deep and has lots of sadness. This is a hint just in case you might be looking for something light. There is a movie made of this book and it is also wonderful. I won't go into to much detail since there are already so many reviews. I can just say that looking deeper than just the sadness can be enlighting.

Lisa Nary

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A good story, but way tooooo long
Review: Jane Hamilton is an excellent writer, and she creates wonderful and plausible stories. But she suffers from logorrhea, an excess of verbiage. A skilled editor with both pruning shears and manicure scissors would have greatly improved this book. There were long passages that I skimmed.
Don't let this keep you from reading the book. It's good. But you don't have to read every single word, not by a long shot.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: kinda boring
Review: The two characters that I can't stand is Theresa and Howard. I mean, they should just get together and divorce their spouses or don't ever start in the first place. Reading about their affair is a pain and it is frustrating. Besides they made it seem as though it was alright. The author made Theresa seem like a goody-two-shoes with no interesting personality. Alice was boring in the beginning and it seems like she went under a sudden personality change when she was arrested. Anyhow, I like her later personality and she was a better character then Howard or Theresa. The book overall is not the type of book I would read if my teacher had not assigned it.


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