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The vast cast of characters and plot lines give this an episodic feel as each chapter focuses on the lives of different residents of the building. The danger, of course, is that some characters get short shift and that is definitely the case here. The lives of the characters vary in their ability to interest the reader as they range from everyday issues to bigger problems like infidelity and great tragedy. Because the narrative moves back and forth so frequently, it is difficult to become fully engaged with any of the story arcs although, British transplant Eve seems the most fully realized and her story the most engrossing overall. The biggest disappointment for me was the superficiality of each segmented part as the characters moved from hurdle to hurdle in their own rather insulated lives. The writing was reasonable though so this might make a decent beach read for those so inclined.
I was not impressed with this book when I read it.
ReplyDeleteI am not a huge Noble fan but damned if I don't sob my little eyes out every time I read something by her!
ReplyDeleteLove your review. It seems to capture everything I like/don't like about her writing.
I read the Reading Group by Noble and liked it but that was also an "ensemble piece" and there just wasn't enough of some characters - interesting that she went with the same format this time.
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like an interesting idea for a book -- I like the idea of ensemble pieces. After all, one of my favorite movies is Love Actually. :-) However, it does sound like none of the characters are developed fully. Thanks for the honest review!
ReplyDeleteI like the idea of the book, but maybe the execution wasn't the best. I still haven't tried Noble yet, but read so many good things about her books.
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