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Women's Fiction

Flight Lessons

Flight Lessons

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A pretty good read
Review: This book is not as good as her "Saving Graces" or "Circle of Three" ~~ but it runs along the same theme where women have friction in their relationships with one another and how they choose to solve their problems. This time, it's about Anna and her aunt, Rose, who she caught in her father's bed when she was 20. Thus began a history of Anna's flight from reality and truth ~~ and Rose. Rose needed Anna's help to get the family restaurant back into shape ~~ Anna needed a place to go after another failed love relationship ~~ and this is the basis of this novel.

I enjoy this novel ~~ but it's not Gaffney's best. The heart and soul of this book is about women's relationships and how it define them in the world ~~ it lacks passion and fire like her previous books. The characters themselves don't move the reader like it should ~~ and somehow I get the feeling the book is stilted in its writing. Maybe I am just disappointed that it's not a good of a read like the others ~~ where you dive into the book and sigh with nostaglia over mothers and daughters and friends. Maybe this is because I don't have an aunt that I am very close to ~~ it is an interesting perspective on an aunt/niece relationship ~~ something this nuclear society hasn't seen much of.

It is a good book ~~ quick and easy. If you're looking for a more in-depth reading ~~ this book isn't it. Don't expect this book to be like her previous books ~~ it's not.

2-25-03

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A wonderful book !
Review: This was the first book I'd read by Patricia Gaffney, and I must say, it will not be my last. I truly felt a part of the story and felt that I was a part of the characters' lives. I felt the characters' personality flaws deeply and on a very personal level. I enjoyed "watching" the relationships grow and change, just as the characters themselves grew and changed. I felt moved by the flawed, complicated, but deep relationship shared between Rose and Anna.

"Flight Lessons" also had another side effect---it made me want to own my own restaurant ! In all seriousness, this is a lovely book. I look forward to reading more books by this author.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Her best yet . . .
Review: Too bad five stars is the highest rating available, because this book deserves more. Warm, witty, and wise, this is a story that resonated with me, perhaps because I'm half Italian, but mostly because Gaffney is such a terrific writer. This book made me cry, especially during the touching love scene between Theo and Rose. And contrary to what the Amazon reviewer thought, I loved the developing relationship between Anna and Mason. It was nice to see a prickly, very human woman portrayed so realistically, with every single one of her warts showing. Of course, their fledgling romance didn't have the same depth and richness as Theo and Rose's. How could it? They were just beginning to know one another. Trust and the deep kind of forever love we all want will (one hopes) come later, whereas Theo and Rose have all that history and are nearing the end of their time together. I highly recommend this book and want to thank the author for a wonderful reading experience. I'm looking forward to many more Gaffney books.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A wonderful book !
Review: Two years ago, I read Patricia Gaffney's The Saving Graces while on vacaton at the shore. It ended up being the best book I read that entire summer. When I saw that this author had a new book coming out for this summer, I bought it immediately with the intention of saving it for my vacation in the hope that I'd, once again, find another summer favorite in Gaffney's new offering. Unfortunately, this was not to be the case. Even though Lavyrle Spencer has retired, I had the feeling that I was reading one of her stories -- albeit a very poor rendition of one.

The setting is the Eastern Shore of Maryland but the reader never really gets the feeling that they are anywhere near the water, even though one of the characters lives on a boat. Anna Fiore has returned to her childhood home to help her Aunt Rose bring some life back into the failing family restaurant. This would all be well and good except for the fact that Anna really doesn't want to be there (or so she says) and fights her aunt and friends constantly by continually making sure they understand this is a "temporary" arrangement. By this time, I was wishing that Anna would leave already instead of waiting around while everyone begs her to stay. The reader will learn why she is so antagonistic towards her aunt and what the grudge is that she still holds against her -- some twenty years later.

I've often been involved in discussions as to whether one can truly enjoy a book if they can't stand the characters. I find this very hard to do and this book is a perfect example of my contention. It is filled with surly, self-serving, phobia filled, sickly, beseeching and bad-tempered individuals who supposedly will all come together in a common goal. If the saying that "opposites attract" is true, then this book is right on target with its character development even though the combinations stretch one's imagination to the limit at times.

My last criticism is in the title and the cover. I feel that this cover, of a white picket fence set in the sand dunes, is meant to give summer readers that "beachy" feeling they are looking for. It's deceptive because it is not a "beachy" feeling kind of book. And, what's up with the title FLIGHT LESSONS?? -- it's really not indicative at all of the story. The proper cover should have been that of a restaurant and the title perhaps "Cooking Lessons" but that might have been too boring (like this book). Well, whatever lesson was to be learned, I must have missed it.

This three star rating, by the way, is on the low end of the scale almost leaning towards two stars.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: YAWN!!!!!
Review: Two years ago, I read Patricia Gaffney's The Saving Graces while on vacaton at the shore. It ended up being the best book I read that entire summer. When I saw that this author had a new book coming out for this summer, I bought it immediately with the intention of saving it for my vacation in the hope that I'd, once again, find another summer favorite in Gaffney's new offering. Unfortunately, this was not to be the case. Even though Lavyrle Spencer has retired, I had the feeling that I was reading one of her stories -- albeit a very poor rendition of one.

The setting is the Eastern Shore of Maryland but the reader never really gets the feeling that they are anywhere near the water, even though one of the characters lives on a boat. Anna Fiore has returned to her childhood home to help her Aunt Rose bring some life back into the failing family restaurant. This would all be well and good except for the fact that Anna really doesn't want to be there (or so she says) and fights her aunt and friends constantly by continually making sure they understand this is a "temporary" arrangement. By this time, I was wishing that Anna would leave already instead of waiting around while everyone begs her to stay. The reader will learn why she is so antagonistic towards her aunt and what the grudge is that she still holds against her -- some twenty years later.

I've often been involved in discussions as to whether one can truly enjoy a book if they can't stand the characters. I find this very hard to do and this book is a perfect example of my contention. It is filled with surly, self-serving, phobia filled, sickly, beseeching and bad-tempered individuals who supposedly will all come together in a common goal. If the saying that "opposites attract" is true, then this book is right on target with its character development even though the combinations stretch one's imagination to the limit at times.

My last criticism is in the title and the cover. I feel that this cover, of a white picket fence set in the sand dunes, is meant to give summer readers that "beachy" feeling they are looking for. It's deceptive because it is not a "beachy" feeling kind of book. And, what's up with the title FLIGHT LESSONS?? -- it's really not indicative at all of the story. The proper cover should have been that of a restaurant and the title perhaps "Cooking Lessons" but that might have been too boring (like this book). Well, whatever lesson was to be learned, I must have missed it.

This three star rating, by the way, is on the low end of the scale almost leaning towards two stars.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A simple dish, perfectly done
Review: While the plot of FLIGHT LESSONS may not be either particularly involved or original -- a woman returns home to help salvage the family's dying business, which in turn forces her to confront issues from the past -- Pat Gaffney's rich characterizations, as well as the emotional depth behind her deceptively simple prose, certainly made this story a winner for me.

These are people with both strengths and weaknesses, whose actions and attitudes we might not always agree with but whose motivations are always made clear. Gaffney really nails the complexity of human relationships, that true-to-life mixture of tart and sweet that can make the reader both want to root for a character and knock some sense into him or her at the same time. The relationship between the sixty-year-old Rose and her dying lover Theo is a particular treasure, but the quiet, scarred Mason stole my heart (even though I agree with another reviewer that perhaps his emails were too long -- but at least he apologized for that!). A lesser man would have given up on the hard-headed Anna by halfway through the book: that he didn't makes him a real hero in my eyes.

But perhaps what most impressed me was the way in which Gaffney seamlessly braids so many threads. I never felt I was reading about several separate subplots, since each character's situation so tightly intersected with the others'. Very difficult to pull off, but Gaffney makes it seem effortless.

While I've read, and thoroughly enjoyed, Ms. Gaffney's previous contemporary novels, for some reason (Mason, would be my guess) this one's edged out the others as my new favorite. These were people I wouldn't mind checking up on in a few years to see how they're doing.

And I can't ask more of a book than that.


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