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Gillian Murray Kendall

Autor(a) de The Garden of Darkness

3 Works 28 Membros 2 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Gillian M. Kendall

Obras de Gillian Murray Kendall

The Garden of Darkness (2014) 17 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
USA
Locais de residência
Northampton, Massachusetts, USA
Educação
Stanford University (BA|MA
Harvard University (MA|PhD)
Ocupação
professor
literary scholar
Renaissance literature
young adult writer
Relacionamentos
Kendall, Paul Murray (father)
Kendall, Carol (mother)
Pequena biografia
Gillian Murray Kendall earned a B.A. and M.A. from Stanford University and an M.A. and Ph.D. from Harvard University. She is a professor of English literature at Smith College, and particularly loves to teach Renaissance literature and drama. She is the editor of and contributor to a volume of essays called Shakespearean Power and Punishment (1998) and the author of the dystopic young adult novel Garden of Darkness (2014). She is also the author of articles and short stories. She is married to Robert Dorit, a biologist, with whom she has two sons.

Membros

Resenhas

I feel like Gillian Murray Kendell wanted to create a grim, darkly realistic take on the already massive young adult post apocolyptic genre. A young adult The Road if you will. Which would have been pretty cool, but unfortunately Kendell misses the mark here.

The problem, the main one at least, is that she constantly pulls her punches. Maybe she was just too attached to her characters, I don't know, but she was constantly putting them in threatening situations and then pulling them out at the last minute.

Early on a little girl is stabbed, seemingly fatally. I was impressed. I thought, ok, this author is really going to look at what life would be like for kids in an adultless, post epidemic world. But no the kid turned out to fine, and was up and about in a few days.

This happened again and again. The characters would fine themselves in a terrible, dangerous situation but right before anything permanent could happen the author would pull back. After a while I stopped worrying that anything bad was going to happen. No matter how bad everything looked I know everything would be fine. Boring.

Add to this kids that do not act like like kids at all. A thirteen year old can apply stitches and diagnose meds. A fifteen year old cheerleader quotes shakespeare. A seven year old constantly sprouts philosophic hindu musings. It's not even slightly believable. The stereotypical, one note main bad guy is barely worth mentioning and the ending is just ridiculous.

Overall it wasn't bad enough to stop reading but it was pretty meh.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
MeganDawn | 1 outra resenha | Jan 18, 2016 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
3
Membros
28
Popularidade
#471,397
Avaliação
½ 2.6
Resenhas
2
ISBNs
8