Reviews

Vodoriga by Andrew Davidson

brn's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Very very interesting. I recommended this book to a few male friends and they could not even get into it. Yet any of the women I have spoken with who have read it loved it. The book grabbed me right away. And not just because it was talking about a man's penis.

goodem9199's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Oy. This is a tough book to talk about. The writing was amazing, but the story was so...weird. REALLY weird. Think former druggie-porn-star-turned-burn victim/mentally ill nude sculptress/reincarnation/religion/love/pain/gothic/historicalfiction...whew. Told ya it was hard to talk about! I think I'm going to go binge on Clifford books to recoup.

robynedexter's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

This book was such an emotional roller coaster and I loved it so much.

takumo_n's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

I'm totally not jealous that this is a very decent debut novel and made the author a millionaire, no sir! The book is about a guy with a horrible childhood filled with abuse of every kind, he becomes a porn actor in his young adulthood and while high and drunk gets into a car accident that burns him alive. In the hospital he meets Marianne Engel, a mental patient who tells him stories about herself 700 years ago, she being a baby found at the steps of a monastery in Germany and with incredible talent for leguages starts helping with translations of different parts of the Bible. Until in this story of the past she mets with our protagonist who is a mercenary carrying Dante's inferno which saves him from an arrow to his heart (very sutil), and Marianne does a personal translation to the German of the Inferno. While at the hospital she also tells him others stories of Japanese, Scandinavian, and Germanic folklore that bleed in with reality, even Dante's Inferno, all about lost love, death, and physical pain. It's pretty interesting. The problem is the main character not really behaving like an abused person getting out of drugs, or Marianne really conducting herself as a crazy person without her meds. So except for Marianne's tales, the main story is not that interesting. But it has a killer beginning and ending, and it is a debut after all, they all have the problem of not trusting their audience, because they don't have one. But it's good, I promise.

mrsbear's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Ok, this book is right up there in my top ten favorites. It's a love story, a life changing story, a story within a story. It make me laugh, cry and rethink a lot of things. I can't say enough good things about this book, just read it.

mzokiegolfer's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

When it came time to list the genre on my reading schedule, not sure where to put it ~ fantasy, romance, historical fiction. A little of all I guess. I didn't dislike this book as I thought it was amazingly well written for a debut novel but wasn't quite sure I was fully invested in the book. I would read a little and then put it down and go do something else so it was just so-so. Others can give a better review re book synopsis.

chloec18's review against another edition

Go to review page

mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

marthahope's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Overall I enjoyed this book. The narrator is engaging and his dark sense of humour and sarcasm was definitely one of my favourite aspects of the novel.
However, I found myself getting restless and a little bored about two thirds of the way through. Although I initially enjoyed the storytelling of Marianne - which reminded me strongly of Scheherazade in Arabian Nights - I felt like these stories held more drive and conflict than the centre story. I really wanted to love the book, the narrator had some beautifully written insights and opinions on life, love and humanity, but instead I found myself eager for the novel's close.
I strongly disliked the narrator's trip to Hell during his morphine withdrawal, I understand why it happened and how it was necessary in regards to Marianne's stories, but I really did not like it.
I think I went into the book with expectations and it didn't quite live up to them. Nevertheless, Andrew Davidson writes with a lyricism that really shines through at points, it just failed to grab me in the same way as others.

dormilona's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Really great. Hits all the things I like in a story. History, romance, religion, feel-good tragedy, and a really great voice of a narrator. And unexpectedly funny!

emerygirl's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

This book was... Interesting. The writing was superb, but the story line failed to keep me hooked. I'm afraid some of it was too deep for my simple mind.