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The Lilac Bus

The Lilac Bus

List Price: $54.95
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Short Stories
Review: Each story is about a different person, looks in the characters' minds and how they view the others they travel with. I liked Binchy's heartwarming style, there is no end like typical novel. That makes the book unique, it does not try to give you a message.



Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Gotta love Binchy
Review: I absolutely love anything and everything that Maeve Binchy writes. While The Lilac Bus isn't my favorite one of Binchy's books, it is rather enjoyable light reading. I find myself sucked into the mini stories that always manage to inner connect. Binchy is quite the story teller:)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent Storytelling.
Review: I have, to my surprise, found some of Binchy's books to be a little sketchy. After reading Tara Road, I wondered if perhaps that book had been authored by a distant cousin or mayhap a complete stranger to Binchy's talent. I would not have recognized the author of that book to be the same artist who created The Lilac Bus. This is great storytelling. Each vignette represents a short period in the life of one of the characters. Since each character has their own voice in their own story and then is also "remembered" by the other characters in _their_ stories, you walk away from this novel feeling as if you had been to visit for a weekend. Many scenes are shared by the characters so you are able to experience many moments through different pairs of eyes each time for a deep, rich and very compelling experience.

This is probably my favorite Binchy novel along with Evening Class. I will hope for more like it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Disappointing and unfinished
Review: I loved "Evening Class". I enjoyed "Light a Penny Candle". Then I read "The Lilac Bus". It was very disappointing because it seemed incomplete and unfinished. For a writer who tied up all loose ends as carefully as Maeve Binchy did with the characters of "Evening Class", why does she leave the chartered bus travelers' histories just twisting in the wind? And then she follows this with several short stories that also appear to have no conclusions--I don't get it. I felt cheated.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: The Lilac Bus...where is the ending
Review: I thought this book was delighful, I could not wait to get to the end for the conclusions. Much to my disappointment there are no endings! you are left handing. My balloon was burst.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Not a collection of short stories
Review: It's a fabulous book, engrossing, intriguing and everything. But there's an aspect I just can't agree with the publishers: "The Lilac Bus" is definitely not a story collection. "Victoria Line, Central Line" (also known as "London Transports"), "Dublin Four" or "This Year It Will Be Different" are good examples of this kind of work, not the case of "The Lilac Bus" though. A short story is isolated from the other ones in the same collection, each chapter has its own beginning and end, although they are normally gathered because they belong and are related to a main, general theme (e.g. several parties taking place at the end of the year/women who are professionally and financially independent). That's not the case in this story about eight people who travel every weekend from Dublin to the same destination (a pretty village called Rathdoon) in a lilac-colored minibus. All the characters have their lives more or less intertwined with the others. Each chapter belongs to a different character, but they are linked - an interesting resource similarly used by the author in "The Copper Beech", "Silver Wedding" or "Evening Class" - and these are all novels, not short stories!
Every time a new chapter starts the author goes back in time to focus on the same weekend, of course from a different perspective. That's because such weekend is particularly special to all of the passengers, so they are even connected in terms of chronology as well. They meet throughout the weekend, they think and wonder at times about these people who share the same bus, the chapters are not separate different stories. Obviously each of them have their own special reasons for travelling home, their own points of view, secrets and mysteries that are discovered as each chapter is unfolded. It's really silly to classify this book as a collection of short stories then. All right, it's much shorter than other very long novels such as "Light a Penny Candle" or "The Glass Lake" which are full of details. Never mind, it is just more compact, but still a very good, pleasant, enjoyable read. Call it a "short novel" if you prefer - but nobody needs to be an expert, a literature specialist to notice that's not a collection of short stories.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Leaves you wanting much more
Review: Just finished reading The Lilac Bus and I must say I kind of feel like I wasted my time. The charaters are all interesting and nice to know about but it seemed like you were reading the first couple chapters of a book and then not being able to finish it to find out what else happened. The first eight storys do have a common link as they all ride the bus together the last four are just incomplete stories all their own. I have read many books by Maeve Binchy and have loved them all, but I'm sorry to say I wish I would have passed on this one. Maybe if your a fan of short stories you would like this.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The things that isolate us
Review: Maeve Binchy novels are about ordinary people who have the sort of problems that most people have. Her characters are often working class people who have money worries, problematic personal relationships, and frequently work in dead-end jobs.

In "The Lilac Bus," 7 people who live and work in Dublin, take the lilac bus owned and driven by Tom Fitzgerald, back home to the village of Rathdoon. They arrive late every Friday night and return to Dublin--to their jobs--on Sunday nights. To the other villagers, it's somewhat of a puzzle why anyone who could spend a weekend in Dublin, would choose to come home every single weekend. "The Lilac Bus" is a series of short stories which solve the puzzle of the bus passengers' individual desire or obligation to return to Rathdoon. Each passenger has a unique story, and yet somehow the stories are connecting too.

Following the 8 stories about the bus passengers, Bicnhy gives the reader four additional short stories about Dubliners. I was at first a bit disappointed that the stories didn't continue with the bus passengers (I was ready to hear more about them). Instead, the other four stories are rather sad and concern individuals who seem terribly isolated--even though they are in the middle of Dublin. Religion, and family expectations all seem to serve as ways in which individuals and families isolate each other and themselves. But Binchy, as always, has such a generous approach to human nature, that the stories remained sad--rather than depressing.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful short stories
Review: My wife, a huge Maeve Binchy fan, recommended that I check out this book. I could not be more pleased.

While each of the stories stood on their own merit and were quite engaging, I very much enjoyed the way they intertwined. And it is amazing the way in which Binchy can flesh out her characters in only ten or fifteen pages. (Oh, Nancy Morris, God help you...)

Last month, I read my first Richard Russo novel. This month, Maeve Binchy.

I have some good reading ahead of me.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: If You're A Binchy Fan...
Review: This book full of short stories delves into the personal lives of 8 passengers on a bus that goes from Dublin to a small town on the weekends. Each story is dedicated to a different person, and takes an in depth look in the characters' minds and how they view the others they travel with.

I really enjoy Binchy's style of how each story ovelaps with the next, and how each character interacts with the other passengers who also come home for the weekend. The way that Binchy develops characters, it's almost like snooping in their private diaries.

This book also contains 4 short stories originally published in London as Dublin 4. Each one tells a surprising story of how everyday people cope in society. A wife who has discovered her husband is having an affair, a first apartment for a young country girl, an unexpected pregnancy, and a wife dealing with her alcoholic husband fresh-out of rehab.

This collection is a treasure of true Binchy and is a must have of anyone that is a fan of her work.


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