Helpful Score: 4
A multi-generational saga centered around the semi-dysfunctional Michelson family. Dolly, a 1950's housewife, comes to town and falls in love with their vacant house. She begins to clean it and enters into the lives of the Michelsons. The narrative reaches as far back as the 1890's and as far forward as the 1950's and covers many generations. The book is as much a statement about the power of conformity and the pressures of familial life as it is a reflection on the limitations of a woman's role in marriage. In this sense, the book works.
My problems with the book were more related to the writing than the content. Huge chunks of narration violate the old "show, don't tell" rule of writing. And at 500 + pages, this book is a doorstop. At page 250, I was scratching my head and asking myself, "Why has it taken so long to move the story so little?" This is a book I had to encourage myself to finish.
My problems with the book were more related to the writing than the content. Huge chunks of narration violate the old "show, don't tell" rule of writing. And at 500 + pages, this book is a doorstop. At page 250, I was scratching my head and asking myself, "Why has it taken so long to move the story so little?" This is a book I had to encourage myself to finish.
Helpful Score: 3
This book has it all: history, romance, family dynamics, scenic descriptions. I loved the excerpts from the 1930's - 1950's ladies magazines and articles that started the chapters regarding the main character, Dolly. It really helped me understand the society she was living in at that time, and in turn her actions. The author includes so many little details that paint the picture of the decades she's writing about. Really well done.
Helpful Score: 2
Loved this book. Baker is a talented writer & I look forward to more of her. This novel follows a 1950's era housewife struggling with her new marriage and life in a new town. She falls in love with an abandoned house in the neighborhood and learns about the owners and their scandals/secrets through stories of other housewives. Very detailed and rich.
Helpful Score: 1
At the beginning, I liked the story. But as the main character, Dolly, got entranced with the big beautiful house, JJ (war hero and drunk), and the Mickelson family and their past, so did I. After that, I hated putting down the book. The ending let me down though and technically left open the door for a sequel. Overall, there was one interesting question that lingered with me as it traveled through the 1917-1950, was it the family or the critical eyes of the town (society) that was the problem?
Helpful Score: 1
This book has it all: history, romance, family dynamics, scenic descriptions. I loved the excerpts from the 1930's - 1950's ladies magazines and articles that started the chapters regarding the main character, Dolly. It really helped me understand the society she was living in at that time, and in turn her actions. The author includes so many little details that paint the picture of the decades she's writing about. Really well done.