Sign up for our newsletters to receive our Best of 2024 ezine!

Reviews by Janet Tarasovic

If you'd like to be able to easily share your reviews with others, please join BookBrowse.
Order Reviews by:
Away: A Novel
by Amy Bloom
Swept Away (10/30/2008)
Lillian Leyb is a remarkable heroine whose passion, courage, and determination are inspiring. Equally enthralling are the dozen characters whose lives intersect with hers—actors, immigrants, jailbirds, train porters, prostitutes, constables, woodsmen. Sometimes Bloom can’t resist turning off the main path of Lillian’s journey to follow them down their own roads, leaving John Irving-like previews of their futures strewn in Lillian’s wake. Equally enchanting are her playful chapter titles, like “I’ve Lost My Youth, Like a Gambler with Bad Cards” and “Ain’t It Fierce to Be So Beautiful, Beautiful?”

Lillian’s reliance on a thesaurus to improve her immigrant English keeps a constant parade of synonyms running through her mind, rather like Quoyle’s mental headlines in The Shipping News: “Lillian tells herself to be calm and to be confident (bold, fearless, having no misgivings, she says to herself, and says next, doubtful, uncertain, dubious, and it is a little reassuring, as she walks down to the gray, windowless house in the middle of a brown valley in a wide white sea, expecting to be killed or raped or left as food for the bears, to know at least three good English words for what she is feeling).” Bloom’s verbal effusiveness will appeal to readers who love long, wandering sentences.

As Lillian slogs alone across the country on her near-hopeless quest, her single-minded hope and determination keep us tethered to her. “Lillian does not believe in anything like God….Lillian believes in luck and hunger....She believes in fear as a motivator and she believes in curiosity…and she believes in will. It is so frail and delicate at night that she can’t even imagine the next morning, but it is so wide and blinding by the middle of the next day that she cannot even remember the terrible night. It is as if she gives birth every day.”

Like every great literary odyssey, Lillian’s story strengthens us for our own dark journeys.
  • Page
  • 1

Top Picks

  • Book Jacket: Small Rain
    Small Rain
    by Garth Greenwell
    At the beginning of Garth Greenwell's novel Small Rain, the protagonist, an unnamed poet in his ...
  • Book Jacket: Daughters of Shandong
    Daughters of Shandong
    by Eve J. Chung
    Daughters of Shandong is the debut novel of Eve J. Chung, a human rights lawyer living in New York. ...
  • Book Jacket: The Women
    The Women
    by Kristin Hannah
    Kristin Hannah's latest historical epic, The Women, is a story of how a war shaped a generation ...
  • Book Jacket: The Wide Wide Sea
    The Wide Wide Sea
    by Hampton Sides
    By 1775, 48-year-old Captain James Cook had completed two highly successful voyages of discovery and...

BookBrowse Book Club

Book Jacket
In Our Midst
by Nancy Jensen
In Our Midst follows a German immigrant family’s fight for freedom after their internment post–Pearl Harbor.
Who Said...

I find that a great part of the information I have was acquired by looking something up and finding something else ...

Click Here to find out who said this, as well as discovering other famous literary quotes!

Wordplay

Big Holiday Wordplay 2024

Enter Now

Your guide toexceptional          books

BookBrowse seeks out and recommends the best in contemporary fiction and nonfiction—books that not only engage and entertain but also deepen our understanding of ourselves and the world around us.