Clique em uma foto para ir ao Google Livros
Carregando... The Secret Papers of Madame Olivetti (2008)de Annie Vanderbilt
Nenhum(a) Carregando...
Registre-se no LibraryThing tpara descobrir se gostará deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. When I first started reading it I was a bit confused..I went back and re-read the beginning and really enjoyed it. Another book about self-discovery, but more it is about coming to terms with the past and mistakes people make.It is well written and it made me want to visit the Cote d' Azur! ( ) With its clever structure and highly personal content, The Secret Papers of Madame Olivetti captures the struggle of one woman to forgive herself for imagined transgressions in her past. Protagonist Lily recalls a continuing series of sensual encounters, some of which cause her guilt, and from which we are never very far. In fact, I recognize these as the best descriptions of a woman’s sensuality I have ever encountered. Author Annie Vanderbilt guides our tour very effectively, and I will always honor her for that. After a promising start, however, Madame Olivetti unfortunately bogs down from the weight of guilt, delusion, and the life lessons that come too late for the most deserving characters. Through a series of highly effective erotic scenes, which are not explicit but just very well done, we understand a central feature of Lily’s nature. She bestows her men with love and shares her sensuality generously with them – and most of these episodes occur with her husband Paul as they try to build a family. Lily occupies Paul’s ancestral home in the south of France for a month each summer, and the summer after he dies suddenly of a heart attack, she sets herself the task of putting her guilt-ridden thoughts down on paper, using an aged manual Olivetti typewriter. Her local friends help her see that her guilt stems from a delusion: she thinks she conceived her daughter while having an affair in Mexico (some of the best, dreamiest sensual writing in the book), but an old photograph and a matriarch’s memory help her see the error of her ways. Ms. Vanderbilt constructs a clever framework in which she allows Lily to tell her story, and interposes a current-events narrative in which her widowed heroine does the writing (while finding yet another partner for rewarding sex). The author slowly reveals Lily’s fraught emotional state to us, but then we find out it’s all a mistake, based on a series of graphically-told emotional losses and doubts. This book’s main reward lies in the effectiveness and clarity of Lily’s internal dialogue. It is constructed on a mistaken and damaging guilt in the main character that I had a hard time crediting, although the author gives it a very game try. http://bassoprofundo1.blogspot.com/2012/11/the-secret-papers-of-madame-olivetti-... I took The Secret Papers of Madame Olivetti with me as a vacation read. I was looking for a light read to help pass the time of a very long car ride. Wow, I really should have read the book description a little closer before choosing it as my companion for the journey! The brightly colored cover looked fun and whimsical…not so much the story. It was sad and a little depressing. Definitely, not a let’s party like it’s 1999, kinda book. I felt for Lily, the centerpiece of the book. We see her life from the beginning all the way through middle age. Joy and grief. Reflection and despair. They all play a part in her life and shape her as she goes along. She makes some not so smart choices, enough to where you feel like hitting her upside the head; however, if you try not to judge her, you begin to understand what drives her decisions. This book made me very sad and a little “book depressed.” Another time, another place and it may have been the perfect book for the occasion, but as I was in the midst of trying to have fun on my vacation…all it did was drag me down. Still, I hung in there to finish it and am glad that I did, because I always want to give the writer my all in appreciation for their hard work. It is certainly worth a go if you are interested, just be forewarned that there’s no frivolity in sight! The best thing about this debut novel is that the protagonist is middle-aged and still enjoying an active and passionate love life! Shortly after the sudden death of her husband, Paul, Lily Crisp returns to their summer home in France with her trusty old Olivetti typewriter, the titular Madame, to document her life. As she is remembering significant events she also rethinks her relationships and their profound effects not on just her alone, but on her marriage. And, very nicely, as an added benefit to her artistic and spiritual endeavor, she gets to have a romantic and satisfying affair with the handsome and patient handyman whose strangled relationship with his own mother reflects the dynamic between Paul and his mother. There are multiple stories to keep track of, including a little mystery bun-in-the-oven, but Vanderbilt manages to bring it all together in the end. sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
The coast of Southern France sparkles in this sexy, mature, and engaging debut novel. Lily has come to southern France in search of a new perspective, hoping that the sun's soft rays and the fragrant sea breezes will provide a relaxing respite from the demands of her lively daughter and her family's Idaho cattle ranch. Two years after her husband's sudden death, in the house that's been in his family for generations, she finally finds some stolen weeks to make sense of the past. To Madame Olivetti'her cranky old manual typewriter?Lily entrusts all her secrets, pounding out the story of the men she loved, the betrayals she endured, the losses she still regrets. And with the companionship of Yves, the seductive handyman who comes by to make repairs, Lily comes closer to understanding her exhilarating past'and to discovering she has a new story to tell'one about the delights of starting over. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
Current DiscussionsNenhum(a)Capas populares
Google Books — Carregando... GênerosClassificação decimal de Dewey (CDD)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClassificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos E.U.A. (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
É você?Torne-se um autor do LibraryThing. |