Natalie Hart
Autor(a) de Pieces of Me
Obras de Natalie Hart
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
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Membros
Resenhas
Prêmios
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 3
- Membros
- 26
- Popularidade
- #495,361
- Avaliação
- 4.8
- Resenhas
- 1
- ISBNs
- 4
This is a very potted version of what is actually a multi-layered and complex story. It's told in three sections: Pre-Deployment, Deployment and Post-Deployment. The first covers Emma's time in Iraq. She loves her role there, despite being in the middle of a war zone, but she's also dealing with fragments of her past that won't let her go. I really enjoyed this section as I felt that somehow Emma was most herself during this time in Iraq. The second and third sections are difficult to read in different ways. Living through deployment is incredibly hard for both Emma and Adam, but she hadn't prepared herself for the fact that post-deployment might in fact be even harder.
The writing is beautiful, raw and pared back, and also almost poetic at times. As Adam's deployment draws near and Emma has to contemplate months not only without him, but of not knowing if he will return safely, she thinks:
"The deployment date sits between us like a giant hourglass, our moments slipping through its sweeping glass curves. We navigate our way around it to reach each other."
The title of this book is clever. Emma collects fragments of stone, glass and rock, and remembers where she picked each one up and what the place or time meant to her. Each piece is a part of her, and perhaps only by putting all the pieces together can she make herself whole.
Pieces of Me is a love story, a war story, a story of feeling like you don't belong, a story of loss. The detail in this novel is immense and absolutely fascinating. I could tell it was written, not by someone who had done a huge amount of research, but by someone who had experienced the place and the emotions firsthand. Natalie Hart writes with such empathy, such feeling, that I read many of the pages with a lump in my throat, not to mention the tears in my eyes as I read the final chapter.
It's a triumph of a novel. The backdrop of the Iraq war made for compelling reading and, to be honest, Emma and Adam's story nearly broke me. It's just so heartfelt and devastating. It's quite beautiful.… (mais)