Rating: Summary: "Anna's Book" is my favorite book of all time! Review: This is the most extraordinary book I have ever read, and read, and read! While it requires a little effort to "get into" the story, the end rewards are great indeed. The plot involves mysteries inside mysteries, and you're not even aware that they ARE mysteries until the answers begin to unfold. Anna's life, as revealed through her diaries, is masterfully told, from her girlhood, through her marriage and child-raising years, into her old age and death. We get to know Anna intimately, her joy, her pain, her prejudices, and we learn the truth about Swanny, the child her husband rejected.
Rating: Summary: "Anna's Book" is my favorite book of all time! Review: This is the most extraordinary book I have ever read, and read, and read! While it requires a little effort to "get into" the story, the end rewards are great indeed. The plot involves mysteries inside mysteries, and you're not even aware that they ARE mysteries until the answers begin to unfold. Anna's life, as revealed through her diaries, is masterfully told, from her girlhood, through her marriage and child-raising years, into her old age and death. We get to know Anna intimately, her joy, her pain, her prejudices, and we learn the truth about Swanny, the child her husband rejected.
Rating: Summary: Not my favorite but.... Review: this was an excellent book (as usual) from Barbara Vine (Rendell). I love how she goes back and forth from past to present in such an easy manner. The "twists" are wonderful and easy to believe - and once again I was surprised at the ending!
Rating: Summary: should read it Review: This was the first Rendell book that I came across while being stuck at an airport. And it started my Rendell-mania. What distinguishes Rendell from the various mystery/suspense writeres, is her talent and ambition to create not only a suspensful plot, but also to infuse the novel with athmosphere. In Anna's Book the reader gets close not only to Anna, but to the life and physical and emotional difficulties immigrants in England encounter.
Rating: Summary: should read it Review: This was the first Rendell book that I came across while being stuck at an airport. And it started my Rendell-mania. What distinguishes Rendell from the various mystery/suspense writeres, is her talent and ambition to create not only a suspensful plot, but also to infuse the novel with athmosphere. In Anna's Book the reader gets close not only to Anna, but to the life and physical and emotional difficulties immigrants in England encounter.
Rating: Summary: Clever, surprising, powerful Review: Well, what can I say but, This novel is by Barbara Vine (Ruth Rendell) and that means it is excellent. That statement is true of every single one of her 50 + books. Anna's Book is no exception (much more suitably titled, "Asta's Book" in the UK). It is an incredibly powerful mysery, brilliantly told. The narrative is so powerful that you become swept away, almost not noticing how brilliant the characters are, how stunningly she evokes the atmosphere of fin de siecle London, and the experience of a foreigner's integration into that often exclusive society. This is a remarkable book not just for the fact that it is a great mystery, but all the other things as well. Boiled down very basically, it is about the unravelling of a mystery surrounding Anna, a Danish immigrant to the UK in 1905. Years later, an extensive series of diaries of her penship are found, and published to great acclaim. Soon, though, it becomes clear that something in those diaries contains the clue to a century-old unsolved murder and the disappearance of a young child...It is up to her grandaughter Ann, who has inherited the original diaries upon the death of her aunt, to delve deep into Anna's life, and an era about which society was very different to today. Vine writes brilliantly, and she creates character with an almost unbelieveable ease. The mystery is woven in and plotted with a skill that astounds: certainly, if a reader were to ask "If one book were to more purely exemplify Ruth Rendell's clearly brilliant plotting abilities, what would it be?" I would answer heartily, "Anna's Book"! Anna herself is a fascinating character, and her diaries entries are sprinkled throughout the novel, and make some brilliant reading. I found myself often having to tell myself that they were fiction, not the result of some Danish immigrant's boredom at the turn of the century. They alone are a remarkable achievement. I can only say well done to Rendell, for creating a sterling mystery novel, a brilliant character study, and a wonderful and atmospheric rendering of an old society gone by. Great stuff from Vine.
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