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The Dress Lodger

The Dress Lodger

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A witch with words
Review: Holman's style is acrobatic, creative, and oceanic. (Only the fattest of Webster's had entries for "tabid" and "squim," and at the mention of the latter blushed with embarrassment.) But she (or rather the reader) pays a price for her unique style -- sometimes it empedes fluency and even calls for rereading sentences, esp. when using pronouns left to guessing the references. Whatever happened to simple and direct speech? Holman reminds me of a newly graduated participant of a writers workshop where a premium is placed on "being different." I am talking about her style only, because she's got a superb story whose merit doesn't need the slightly affected trick of addressing the reader in the midst of the narrative. It introduces an unnecessary, extraneous element. But for the large part this is a fascinating story of 1831 England and the visitation of the cholera -- morbid, but realistic, and told with boldness.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: FANTASTIC
Review: Most books even the most excellent dont keep my attention long enough but the Dress Lodger was the exception. I could not put the book down it was excellent. It was morbid, depressing and gave you a great desription of the time. I grew attached to all the characters and their quirks and flaws. I mean how can you not love a book set during the chloera morbus epidemic about a 15 year prostitute her child with with a strange medical oddity and a the dreadful eye who follows her. You also get a great understanding of how people viewed doctors and how doctors had to steal dead bodies in order to study them and help their patients.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Pretentious- grisly - depressing- morbid
Review: I bought this book based on the strength of the advert in the book club and was looking forward to reading it. What a surprise when I got it! And what a dissapointment. The pretentious narrator destroyed any sympathy I could have had for the characters of this grim, grisly and depressing depiction of this period in English history. I found the constant 'dear reader' cloying and distanting. If Ms. Holman thought she would become the modern equivalent of Dickens with this book, she couldn't be more wrong. Her loving detail with the death scenes is morbid in the extreme. Dickens wrote a lot of grim detail too, but his characters were filled with hope and love and the promise of redemption. These characters are not!

I can't remember what author said it, but this is not a book to be tossed aside gently, it should be thrown with great force against the wall. I'm just sorry I can't give it no stars.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: couldn't put it down
Review: Original, captivating, riveting characters, evocative setting, great history, unpredictable, imaginative, slightly horrifying but utterly absorbing. Obviously well researched with great attention to detail. A fascinating tale beautifully told.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Cudda Been A Contenda
Review: There are times Sheri Holman can turn a phrase of such beauty and clarity, it makes me want to weep for the truth therein. Aside from those few crystalline moments, this book is rather a loss. Pity, for it has oodles of potential. Such great plot elements ... such a rich social period to work with ... such opportunity to play light against dark, fact against fiction, need against want, the primitive heart against the compassionate heart .. yes, and such great reviews, overall! But, really ... how am I to care for characters I can't believe even the author cares for? How am I to enter this disturbing world when I am continually condescended to by the jarring presence of a horribly pretentious narrator? How am I to plant myself firmly in the period atmosphere when the language shifts from Britishese to Americanese, from authentic terminologies to modern slang, and back again with no rhyme or reason? I don't mind bleak, grim, or gruesome. I don't even mind examining close-up the callous disregard humans can bear one another. But I do mind, as a reader, being treated with that same shallow disregard.

There is a gifted writer lurking in here, making occasional appearances. This book, however, is far too uneven and inconsistent in tone and style to qualify as great. It is, instead, confused ... the book that didn't know what it wanted to be. When Ms Holman begins to let her material speak for itself, rather than speaking on behalf of her material, when she ceases to preen herself at the expense of her narrative and characters, she will be able to offer something truly worth reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Historical fiction writing at its best
Review: If you wanted to be a surgeon in the early part of the 19th century, how would you receive training in anatomy? That's the crux of this very well-written, historical novel. The author paints what appears to be an accurate poicture of time and place, and her characters are well-drawn, even the minor ones. This is a somewhat sorrowful story, but a chilling cautionary tale that reveals how advances in medical science came about in times when class warfare and suspicion were the rule, rather than the exception. It's not a pretty book by any means, but worth reading to learn the way of life of 175 years ago in a town ravaged by cholera morbus.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Highly over-rated
Review: This book is strange, dark, unhappy, twisted, and somewhat boring. I had to force myself to finish it. Don't expect historical fiction, just historical boredom and dreariness. Definitely not a book to be judged by its cover. Strange such a normal looking author should write such an odd, morbid novel in which everyone is just plain bad or sad.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Bizarre
Review: While reading this strange novel, I repeatedly flipped back to the dust jacket to examine the author's photo. Hard to conceive that this unusually imaginative novel was written by someone so normal in appearance. I suppose I expected a demented looking individual! Much of the book was interesting and informative, though graphic in regard to dead bodies, disease, autopsy, grave digging, etc. The distrust/paranoia of the poor regarding the rich was fascinating. Certain characters and their points of view were true encounters of the bizarre. Overall, the story makes one appreciate the hurdles that doctors had to overcome and the progress made in the field of medicine.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Grim, Gripping Grave-robber Yarn
Review: Sherri Holman has done a wonderful job of historical reconstruction in this novel. She recaptures the world of the town of Sunderland in 1831 with great skill. One of her most fascinating creations is a old woman known as the Eye who never speaks just shadows the dress lodger of the title. I suspect some readers might have been helped by having some material on the Burke and Hare murders of 1829 which preceded the events of this tale and formed a necessary background. However Ms. Holman's narrative grip is so sure that the reader quickly forgives and forgets this minor inconvenience, having some sense that whatever Messrs. Burke and Hare were up to, it was nasty!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wow!
Review: The language is rich and dark, lush like a primeval garden, yet spare like the cholera-stricken Suderland it portrays. This is no genre novel. If you love mysteries, fantastic realism and language like a fog, this is for you. It's a page-turner to boot!


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