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Juliet
Juliet
Author: Anne Fortier
Twenty-five-year-old Julie Jacobs is heartbroken over the death of her beloved aunt Rose. But the shock goes even deeper when she learns that the woman who has been like a mother to her has left her entire estate to Julie’s twin sister. The only thing Julie receives is a key -- one carried by her mother on the day she herself died -- to a ...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780345516107
ISBN-10: 0345516109
Publication Date: 8/17/2010
Pages: 464
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 56

4 stars, based on 56 ratings
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback, Audio CD
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

earlsgirl avatar reviewed Juliet on + 188 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
I read this book because it was a feature recommendation by the library staff and I like historical novels with a bit of mystery and romance. However, this book did not live up to my expectations although I read the entire thing. Janet Evanovich meets Phillipa Gregory! The plot was intriguing but after about 100 pages I realized I didn't really care for the characters or the "mystery". Another reviewer used the word "cheesy" regarding the action scenes, and it also describes the whole book quite well in my opinion. Tedious, with a lot of "Excuse me?!" type of expressions. "Silly" would about cover this so-called "saga".
GeniusJen avatar reviewed Juliet on + 5322 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Reviewed by Candace Cunard for TeensReadToo.com

After the death of her great-aunt, Julie's world is turned upside down. Aunt Rose had raised Julie and her twin sister, Janice, since they were three years old and survived a car crash that killed both of their parents. Now, more than twenty years later, Julie still doesn't know much about her family, except that her mother was American and her father Italian, and that they both died near the city of Siena. So when Aunt Rose leaves the entire monetary value of her estate to Janice, and gives Julie nothing but the key to a Sienese safe-deposit box, Julie is horrified at such an unequal distribution of her aunt's fortune, but also intrigued by this chance to find out more about her own heritage. With nothing left to lose, she hops a plane to Siena and sets to work uncovering the mystery that her mother had been at work on when she died.

Julie quickly discovers that her real name is not Julie Jacobs, but Giulietta Tolomei, and that, if her mother's theories were correct, she is descended in the female line from the Giulietta Tolomei who was the inspiration for the character of Juliet in Shakespeare's ROMEO & JULIET - a story, she discovers, that was originally set, not in Verona, but in Siena. The clues left behind by her mother lead Julie to uncover the remains of the family feud between the Tolomeis and Salimbenis in modern-day Siena, and to delve deeper into the origins of the Shakespearean play that Julie already knows by heart.

The novel switches between presenting modern-day events from Julie's first-person point of view and narrating the events surrounding the original medieval tale of Romeo and Giulietta. As Julie reads the documents left for her by her mother, she discovers alarming facts - for example, that Romeo and Giulietta were not from feuding families, but that a third man stepped in and caused all of the trouble - and begins to ask questions that might put her in danger if heard by the wrong people.

Without a doubt, my favorite parts of the book were when Fortier described modern-day Siena. I've traveled in Italy before (though not to Siena), and her depiction of a city so steeped in history and so connected to its own past both rang true from my experiences of other cities and made me want to visit Siena. I enjoyed Julie's first-person segments of the narrative more than the flashback tale of the original Romeo and Giulietta, where Fortier's attempt to use more time-appropriate language resulted in a strange mishmash of medieval and modern phrasing. I felt much more strongly for the characters in the present of the story than for Fortier's recast Romeo and Giulietta (though I must admit that I never really liked Shakespeare's version, either).

The plot twists and turns itself into an impressive labyrinthine structure, but if you're not paying attention, it's possible to get lost. For this reason, I'd recommend this book primarily to readers who've already encountered ROMEO & JULIET, and particularly to those who enjoyed the story but aren't afraid to see it rewritten in some thought-provoking ways.
ginamig avatar reviewed Juliet on + 76 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
As a Shakespearean English minor in college Romeo & Juliet is one of my favorite works of William Shakespeare but any student of Shakespeare knows that while he may have been brilliant he was also somewhat of a literary thief, taking pieces from other works and making it his own. This theme weaves itself into the book Juliet by Anne Fortier. Jumping between present day and that of the 1340's in Siena we follow the story of Romeo & Guilietta and of the modern day counterpart. What Anne Fortier has done in this story is fantastic. I haven't found a book yet that I haven't liked which encompasses this method and her work is no different.
froot avatar reviewed Juliet on + 178 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I normally flunk books that choose to reverb my favorite classics, but i L-O-V-E-D this. Told through Juliet's perspective in the present, she finds herself retracing her family roots in Italy through clues left from her mother. (I know it sounds soooo boring). The first several pages almost completely discouraged me. Then the flash backs to Romeo and Juliet began and I winced with pain before I read the words. After sticking with it, I was biting my nails and racing through several chapters in angst to find out what new curve ball Fortier was throwing. Anyone who is familiar with Romeo and Juliet will appreciate this modernized re-telling. I FELL IN LOVE with all the characters past and present. By the end I was wishing for more. My only gripe with this is I wish there was a bit more passion between the modern day Alessandro and Juliet. Juliet's twin sister was a character I would have been happy without, but then the story would have felt incomplete for some of the pieces adding up to the end puzzle. Some things felt a bit forced and hard to reckon with, but I would still read this over and over. I want it to be a movie!
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reviewed Juliet on + 531 more book reviews
A great read! 'Juliet' will keep the reader turning page after page on the treasure hunt; entranced by historical fact, fiction and romance. Fortier's writing is a gem. Don't miss reading this book!


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