Rating: Summary: Enjoyable Reading Review: Belva Plain came through once again. A very touching and emotional story about two boys switched at birth. The story was well written with lots of twists and turns. Definitely a page turner.
Rating: Summary: "Plain" doesn't begin to describe it Review: I admit, this is my first Belva Plain book and possibly my last, but since a good friend loaned it to me, I gave it a try. The storyline on the cover didn't appeal to me, bigotry and hate divided two families. Okay. The characters seem shallow and confused in their own lives and then pass that confusion on. Tom is a boy so dedicated to his younger brother Timmy and his girlfriend Robbie, but only bends to his mother's wishes out of sympathy and pity for her. His father is a domineering man who pushes Tom to follow in the beliefs of his dad while belittleing his mother. The Crawfields seem like good people and they seem like the most honest characters in the book.Overall, not a book I'd recommend.
Rating: Summary: Exciting. Review: I haven't finished it yet,but what I've read so far is good, so good that I don't want to put it down. It's both exciting and emotional at the same time. This book is for anyone who likes that type of stuff.
Rating: Summary: A GREAT BOOK! ... Review: I personally like Belva Plain's writing a lot, ...The story was very touching, and Belva Plain expressed the emotions very well of waht others would do in that situation finding out that one of your children isn't your 'biological' child after all. She wrote with feeling through the whole book, and the ending was very well done with all the characters. An excellent read if you ask me!
Rating: Summary: Controversial Review: I was surprised to see such negative reviews! It definitely held my attention and I am recommending it to my book club. I think there is a lot to talk about after reading this book What would YOU do in this situation?
Rating: Summary: Controversial Review: I was surprised to see such negative reviews! It definitely held my attention and I am recommending it to my book club. I think there is a lot to talk about after reading this book What would YOU do in this situation?
Rating: Summary: Interesting and unbelievable... Review: It's a typical Belva Plain book if you ask me. Her characters are dispicable and you never really feel like you are understanding them or that you can relate to them at all. It was an okay story but the characters were just so out of reach. Some elements in the story were to unbelievable as well and the end of the story has a surprising but overwhelmingly unbelievable end. Otherwise just another sad story about the horrible prejudices of the world.
Rating: Summary: BIGOTRY FIGURES IN THE NATURE v. NURTURE CONTROVERSY Review: Margaret and Arthur Crawfield are devastated to learn from a doctor that their terminally ill son, Peter is not really their child. Blood tests have proven that Peter cannot possibly be related to the Crawfords. Since Peter was born in a small clinic, they set upon a quest to find the one other baby boy who was born at the clinic the day Peter was born. Their search leads them to Laura and Bud Rice, an affluent couple with two sons. The younger son, Tim is chronically ill like Peter. Tom, the older of the two is involved in a clandestine chapter of the KKK with Bud. Tom's girlfriend, Robbie is an ardent Nazi and believes "Mein Kampf" to be gospel instead of hateful propaganda. She and Tom share bigotry and she declares that she "went political" at an early age; being "political" is her euphemism for espousing bigotry and hate. The two families meet, Tom's confusion reaches a head...the Crawfields are Jewish! Tom has to accept his natural heritage and yet, he isn't sure about the bigotry that Bud taught him. This story emphasizes the nature v. nurture controversy. Bigotry is not a congenital condition. It is a learned condition. As for Tom, which side does he choose? His natural Jewish heritage or the learned bigotry? And Robbie? Where does she fit into this? The plot does thicken and the story is compelling.
Rating: Summary: BIGOTRY FIGURES IN THE NATURE v. NURTURE CONTROVERSY Review: Margaret and Arthur Crawfield are devastated to learn from a doctor that their terminally ill son, Peter is not really their child. Blood tests have proven that Peter cannot possibly be related to the Crawfords. Since Peter was born in a small clinic, they set upon a quest to find the one other baby boy who was born at the clinic the day Peter was born. Their search leads them to Laura and Bud Rice, an affluent couple with two sons. The younger son, Tim is chronically ill like Peter. Tom, the older of the two is involved in a clandestine chapter of the KKK with Bud. Tom's girlfriend, Robbie is an ardent Nazi and believes "Mein Kampf" to be gospel instead of hateful propaganda. She and Tom share bigotry and she declares that she "went political" at an early age; being "political" is her euphemism for espousing bigotry and hate. The two families meet, Tom's confusion reaches a head...the Crawfields are Jewish! Tom has to accept his natural heritage and yet, he isn't sure about the bigotry that Bud taught him. This story emphasizes the nature v. nurture controversy. Bigotry is not a congenital condition. It is a learned condition. As for Tom, which side does he choose? His natural Jewish heritage or the learned bigotry? And Robbie? Where does she fit into this? The plot does thicken and the story is compelling.
Rating: Summary: Lame, Don't waste your time! Review: Poorly written, characters that you couldn't care less about, weak plot that is so unbelievable it's not even entertaining--read anything but this book! Not worth the paper it's written on.
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