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Cry to Heaven

Cry to Heaven

List Price: $15.95
Your Price: $10.85
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of my favorite Anne Rice novels.
Review: "Cry to Heaven" is a great piece of work. It begins with a horrifying end, which is the start of a beautiful story filled with pain, love, and song. The rich settings and strong characters make this book one that you just fall into, it envolves you in each aspect of of the novel. I found myself fascinated by the interaction of the characters, and how each related to one another. A great read, I recommend it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: BEAUTIFUL
Review: This story is a heartwrenching work of art. It took me into a whole new world that I had previuosly known very little and made me feel part of the story. The characters are so real you will be postitive they lived.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Took me ages to get into it....but a great book
Review: I should state from the beginning, that as a counter-tenor myself, I was advised by someone else that I would love this book. Now I know why she yells "cry to heaven" when I'm singing!

It took me over a year to get into it. I'd start reading it, and then just give up. Too many Italian names.;-)

When I finally did get into it, I realized just how much effort went into the writing of it.

She gets alot of the emotion involved in the music of the time bang on.

How I wish classical music was as big a part of our lives today, or that people took music as seriously as they did in 17th Century Italy.

Sure theres sex in it, but I didn't find any of it overly gratuitous.

I say that if you like a good love story,however predictable, and or are interested in classical music, read this book.

I admit that she does Vampires much better, but this is a great book and one that I'll be keeping in my personal library.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An incredible buildup to a non-existant climax
Review: The very essence and richness of this book is in its emphasis on the often unnoticed subtleties of life - the uniquely twisted emotions and mentality behind a physically mutilated body, the life and light behind a human voice and music in general, the hate behind a passionate love, the love behind a passionate hate. Perhaps the richest and most complex of these subtleties is that of Tonio's revenge - his means of carrying it out. His decision that forgiveness, as opposed to retaliation, is another one of those incredible plays on the human psyche that are prominent in this book. [...] Overall, this book was breathtaking and incredibly written, which makes the ending so much more disappointing.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Wonderfull story but too much guy on guy sex!
Review: Welpz, that's not to say that i didn't enjoy anne's novel, but i did find it disturbing to read soooo much on guy on guy sex. The story itself was great! and i couldn't have asked for a better plot. but i don't understand why anne likes to write about gay sex. i didn't think Cry to Heaven was an erotica when i bought the book to read, but the first 30 or so made meeh change my mind. there is just too much of gay sex. (i swear, anne has a thing for guy on guy sex. note the vampire chronicals, the mayfair chronicals,and the Feast of all Saints.)

the plot is this: this valued and only son of a rich guy gets kidnapped and gets his "pee-pee" cut off. (his brother who's really his father hired the kidnappers) a castrai takes the boy and teaches him to sing. during this time, the son vows revenage. after a few years the boy gets his revenage. (it's kinda funny how it happens)

welpz that's the plot. like i said, the story couldn't be any better. only the gay sex bothered meeh a little. but then if your the type of person who enjoys this kind of stuff, go for it!; otherwise, stick to the vampire and witch chronicals. their gay sex isn't as obvious. =oÞ

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Highly Enjoyable
Review: Cry to Heaven, in typical Rice fashion, mesmerizes the reader with lavish prose. You come to feel for Tonio and Guido as the tale progresses; Anne Rice masterfully develops her characters. While not particularly profound, this story touches the heart on many levels: the roles of masculine and feminine, the necessity of revenge, the possibility of love and friendship existing in a single relationship, all these things are explored against a beautiful backdrop of Italian culture and countryside. Anyone who wishes to enter the enchanting world (which only Rice can create) should read this fine book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A lush historical novel
Review: I had no idea what this book was about when I decided to pick it up in the library and read it. The first line struck me like lightning. I had to re-read a couple of times before the meaning sank in. I have never read a book on castrati singers before and, except for Farinelli, have never heard of any other famous castrati and, to tell the truth, never thought much about what the costs of being a castrato singer were. Anne Rice changed all that. The story of Tonio and Guido was so vivid with every emotion that the main characters were feeling that it is hard to remain unaffected after reading this novel. The plot moves speedily but at times it is too convoluted and too convenient. On emotional level, the novel works extremely well.

To addressed some of the criticisms in the previous reviews, I agree that the sexual relationships (be they heterosexual or homosexual) were a tad too explicit but that is the staple of all of Anne Rice's novels so I was not that bothered by them. I wasn't bothered by the characterization of Christine also. I agree that she was bland and uninteresting, or at least not as interesting as she could have been given her unique postion as a female painter during the times where female artists were rare, but I think that her presence in the novel as Tonio's salvation was well realized.

I absolutely loved the description of Tonio's revenge and admired the author for making some hard and heart-breaking choices. This is the most original novel that I have read in a while and definately worth the read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: touching beyond belief
Review: I didn't expect to like this book. My knowledge of opera was so slim it was laughable, but what I'd heard of it and understood about it made me want to puke. And then I picked this up, figuring, Anne is a fantastic writer, let's see what she does with this subject matter. And Cry to Heaven became one of my favorite Anne Rice books, as well as one of my favorite books, period! I couldn't put it down, and I cried, I couldn't even restrain myself from reading it over again... and it's a hefty book. I didn't even wait two weeks before reading it again. And like someone else who reviewed this said, it opened me to opera. I like alternative normally, but she made me so curious about what the castrati sounded like that I went to Blockbuster and found the only possible movie TO find on the castrati; Farinelli. I now own the movie and the soundtrack, and I listen to it nearly nonstop. (it's a recreation of a castrati's voice using a digitally morphed mixture of a soprano female and a contre-tenor male's voices). This isn't the only opera with such quality, either. I mean, Anne has opened up my ears to some amazing, ethereal sounds. And I can't praise this book of hers sufficiently. I loved its characters, I loved the plot, everything! Though I concur with those who found Tonio's female little love less than completely satisfying. But still! It doesn't matter! This book is a masterpiece!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Truly a cry...disturbing and at times unbearable
Review: Because I've fallen so helplessly in Love with Anne Rice'swritings, I would forgive her nearly anything. But this novel waslittle bit too much for me. I admit that I've been enchanted with the grand historical background of the 18th century Italy and "the otherworldly society of the castrati", of which I knew nothing before reading the novel, and which Anne Rice has been able to bring back so magically to life. The acute and indescribable pain of Tonio, the protagonist, is just at times too real and haunting to the extent that I had to put down the novel for a while to calm down and be able to bear all that pain. Yes, Anne Rice can make you stay up all night reading her book or stop reading at one point to digest the too real emotions she describes or the questions she raises. Tonio's confusion and questions are so touching and disturbing that they became mine for quite some time. What was far too disturbing for me and at times unbearable is the total indulgence of desires that Tonio practices. I would have really loved the novel far more if that indulgence has not been described so often and sometimes with so much details. All in all, Anne Rice has proven her ability to write a book of supernatural strength though there are no supernatural beings in it and once more she captivates and captures her readers as only few writers could.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Cry to Heaven
Review: This is a very good book, it actually got me interested in opera! Iwas flipping through the channels the other day and suddenly came on to The Marriage of Figaro on PBS. Being bored and remembering Cry to Heaven I decided to listen to some of it and while I was watching it I kept thinking of Tonio and all of his voice excercises and how beautifully Anne described the music and I was really enjoying listening to it and this from someone whose usual musical perference is The Smashing Pumpkins and Tori Amos! Anyway, back to the book. Its a great book and really wonderfully written and I think I may like it better than her vampire books (Feast of all Saints is probably my favorite book,or at least the one that kept me the most hooked while reading it) I was wondering though about the eunechs, were they really as supernaturally beautiful as she made them out to be? They all seemed to be super tall and she said they had strange skin. The only complaint I would have against this book would be that while the beginning and the end are very fast paced and interesting the middle sort of drags and there is too much talk about Tonios relationships with other people. I also didn't like the way that he just seemed to drop Guido for "real men" like the cardinal. And Christina was not needed at all, she was boring and I hated every scene with her and Tonio's love for her didn't seem very realistic, not like his love for Guido or the cardinal. I got so sick of reading about her "little darling wrists" or her "little nose." She could have been such an interesting and complex character (a woman painter from that period, a rebel against society) but she came off as flat and boring and I can't believe such a dull person could have been such a glorious painter. Besides that it is a really good book and I fully recommend it. even if you don't like her vampire books you will like Cry to Heaven.


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