Rating: Summary: You get sucked into the Southern insanity of family . Review: "...Secrets...." is a penetrating look into the insanity of the Southern family; where our family members thought to be "eccentric" are flaunted openly rather than hidden in the attic. This book makes me ache for the kind of love Vivi had with her lifelong friends and cringe at the cruelty she imposed on her children. One page I was Siddalee and the next Vivi. Then I would reread it the same pages and the roles would be reversed. The laughter and the agony in each page touched a chord in me every time I've read it. The love of the YaYas for each other and the support they gave made me downright jealous, and I could identify with Vivi when she felt all alone without the YaYas. I could relate to Sidda with each cruel word from her Mother and her desperation to gain approval and love. As a southern woman, I gloried in the courage each showed the world. An glorious read. And Vivi's remarks "Try good manners", is not just a quote from a book. It is a truth we all should practice.
Rating: Summary: Ya-ya, yadda yadda yadda Review: What a crashing bore. Rule no. 1 in fiction: make your reader care about your characters. Who cares about a bunch of self-absorbed Southern alcoholic pampered useless women like these, who think they are just the cutest little things! Skinny-dipping, disrupting the school play - using the word "poot" - oh my, aren't they just so adorably naughty! Please. I've seen soap operas with more easily identifiable characters.
Rating: Summary: Overblown, Overwritten, Overperfumed Review: I was disappointed. This book was sloppily written. For example on page 45 Wells writes "It was midway into cocktail hour in the state of Louisiana when the portable phone rang at Pecan Grove." On page 47 she writes, "How could she have forgotten it was cocktail time in Louisiana?"On page 66 Teensy says she will gule a pair of her mother's false eyelashes onto the statue of the blessed virgin. In 1937? In rural Louisiana? I don't THINK so. There's too many errors to cite here.
Rating: Summary: So glad I read it... Review: Recommend to me before spending Thanksgiving week at Lake Quinalt Lodge, I was caught up in the book for several reasons. One, I was reading it block away from Sidda's retreat and two, I spent 15 days in New Orleans and visited many plantations this past summer. The relationships detailed in the book between a mother and her children and the friendship between the Ya-Yas was entertaining, thought provoking and simple put "enjoyable". I recommend it be read before Little Alters and read over time so as to enjoy the experience.
Rating: Summary: Humorous, witty, and endlessly intriguing. Review: This book interested me as few books in the past have. I love Rebecca Wells' sense of humor, and although some may find the personalities in this book to be a bit over-the-top, I certainly did not; I thoroughly understood the objectives of each of the characters, and related to them easily.
Rating: Summary: Ya, Ya, I liked this one! Review: A refreshing look at making the most of life, set in the deep south. I felt myself unwinding and settling in the lives of the outgoing Ya Yas. Every family has their ugly secrets, but the Divine Secrets encourages forgiveness and renewal. Our book club is excited to chat about this one. We're going to cook up some spicy Gumbo Ya Ya, play cards and delve into Vivi and Sidda's past.
Rating: Summary: Slow, boring, mean Review: I did not enjoy this book. It was a slow boring read. Vivi is a mean selfish woman as is her daughter. I was really looking forward to reading this book. It was recommended by so many of my friends. I was extremely disappointed. I didn't care how the book ended and didn't even care to finish it, but I pushed through to the end. It never got better.
Rating: Summary: Wretched excess, accent on wretched. Review: "Divine Secrets..." is another example of how popular fiction has never been particularly good at knowing what kinds of characters to examine. The book's single biggest problem is not the awkward structure or the stilted, mannered and rather trite writing (although those do pose significant blocks for a reader). The book's problem is that it is about some of the most insufferably self-absorbed twits to ever grace the face of God's green acres. They are not funny, charming, entertaining, or even interesting in their pathologies. They are a pain, plain and simple. What's worse is that the book doesn't know any of that. The author of "Divine Secrets..." would love for you to believe that these women are just the dearest things around, when five minutes of sanity would show that they're unstable alcoholic wretches who don't have ten words worth repeating between them. Amid all the wallowing in headache-making Suth'rin dialect jokes and tortured plotting that wouldn't convince a Barbara Cartland reader, there is probably a good story about how noisy public self-destruction is often misinterpreted as "free-spiritedness". But the book isn't anywhere nearly that wise about or ironically distanced from its material. "Divine Secrets..." is worse than merely sentimental: it's emotionally untrue in the uniquely horrible way that only popular fictions can be.
Rating: Summary: The Ya Ya Sisterhood knocked me to my knees. Review: It's been a long while since I've read a book whose characters totally devastated me and then have a Vivi to help me pick up all the pieces. To all friends for all time, this is a MUST read. My paperback copy is worn out from many lendings; I'm ordering a hardback copy today.
Rating: Summary: Absolutely Entertaining !!! Review: I could not put this book down. The emotional roller-coaster ride between Vivi and Sidda was true to life. The language, the characters, the stories were fantastic. I've already purchased and read Little Altars and have passed both books on to a friend.
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