Reviews

Grace by Alex Pheby

antoniaj2514's review

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2.0

*TRIGGER WARNING FOR SEXUAL ASSAULT*

I rarely write reviews, but felt the need to express how much I loathed this misogynistic novel.

We begin with Donald, our protagonist, who is an awkward and bullied young man who comes across a mythical Selkie - a creature that can take the form of a human by shedding its seal skin. Of course, his reaction is to forcibly separate her from her family by hiding her skin, rape her, and kidnap her to take home.

She is named Maihri, and that is about the last thing we learn about this woman who serves as a silent and convenient plot device, literally voiceless throughout the book, with all the qualities of a good little wife such as not speaking, helping out whenever a more developed character needs anything, and submitting to her rapist husband and bearing him children. This is made all the more disturbing in that she is also frequently depicted as childlike and innocent.

Everybody comes to accept her as she is so useful to all the busybodies and abusive louts who make up the local town, but she is entirely passive throughout the novel, serving only as the trigger for the much more important character development of Donald, who by the end of the novel has become so brave and wonderful that everyone is falling over themselves to tell him so. He really does develop through the book, I found it particularly moving when he was struggling to not rape his wife again but managed not to, as it showed real growth.

It turns out the sealskin was stolen by his mother, who was a fairly well developed and strong female character so obviously must have secretly done something awful, hiding the skin away so Maihri could do the right thing and carry her forced pregnancy, and of course Donald is going to return it, oh yes, but was just waiting a few more months until the weather was right. His Auntie agrees, it's all Mum's fault.

Luckily, when Maihri finds the sealskin and returns to the ocean, she leaves her children behind for Donald, simultaneously compliant and an evil abandoning mother. She disappears into nothing just as she lived in this novel, with more development and redemption being given to the character of the local bully who tries to sexually assault Mairhi and rapes and beats his wife, with the whole town allowing it to happen and in fact, Donald and his mother telling the wife it's sort of her fault and doing everything they can to give her husband a second chance. Male characters in the book are seen as decent, hardworking and worthy, female characters are generally irritating, abrasive and talk too much, with childbirth their only role in the plot.

All in all, I'm honestly shocked that something like this could be published. I thought we were far beyond this sort of attitude towards women even in fiction. I understand fiction set in different times and am not opposed to portrayals of difficult topics, I could understand if the novel was meant to be critical of the events it portrays but it isn't, it offers them up as some beautiful and moving story where the men get everything they want at the expense of women, and that's a good thing.

dr_logen's review

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3.0

None of my libraries have the next book!! :(

dar_muzz's review

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3.0

A sad little tale of a couple's break-up due to miscommunication, but there are also aliens...

ewelco14's review

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2.0

I really enjoyed this book, set in the uk with lots of relevant slang

cathasach's review

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5.0

Enjoyed this one much better than the last but a little upset that the story line with Lenobia was left so open and to a point where it just felt like she was forgotten several chapters before the book ended. I feel like we could have gotten a little bit more but oh well. Other than that, I liked where this book went and even with the Heath story line, I'm glad the author(s) didn't focus on it as much as I feared they would. Definitely check it out if you're curious to see where this story is going. I got more out of this one that the last and there were a few things that I didn't see coming and liked it.

roza10's review

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4.0

4.5 stars. 0.5 star due to sometimes wanting to slap the heroine in a non fun way. Review after the holidays...

Ok, so it's after the holidays ( 7 months but hey...)
Go read this book!! Seriously, go read it! How many times do i have to say it?? This book is all kinds of wonderful, sweet (in a non sickening/need a glass of water/call my dentist kindda way), funny (more witty actually), heartbreaking book. And I couldn't put it down, couldn't stop thinking about it when i had to put it down. I fell hopelessly in love with the hero, got pissed as hell at the heroiein (and vice versa at times).You know... It's one of those books!

I've just finished the sequel and it was just as wonderful. Don't read it's blurb,it's too reveling, that's why I didn't rate it yet, so you wouldn't read it by accident.

That's it, I'm not gonna beg. Ohhhhh... Fine, I'm begging!

maxines_obsessions's review

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4.0

I enjoyed the book. I found the writing irritating, but I got past that by half way in. Some of the language was ridiculous, but I do get why it was there.
It kept me engaged and I'm looking forward to the next book.
I read a few reviews saying it's similar to hunger games, I don't agree with that at all.
Well worth spending a couple of hours on.

txbooklover's review

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5.0

This psychological/domestic thriller is about a man who is charged with murder after his mistress mysteriously ends up dead in his bed. His wife is an attorney and she takes on the case. There are several potential suspects, lots of ghosts in everyone’s closet, and well developed characters that are all fairly unlikeable. The plot moves along quickly with a lot of mystery, and is told from alternating viewpoints of the husband and the wife. I enjoyed the read. 4.5/5 stars.

lola425's review

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4.0

Prepub. Due out June 2020.

If you liked the Paris Wife you will like this book. A fictionalized version of the life of Lucia Joyce, daughter of James Joyce. Even if you put that information aside, it is an interesting story about how a woman's drive, ambition, and talent could be squashed by social convention and the effects that it might have on a young woman, regardless of who her father is.

Recommended for historical fiction fans who enjoy reading about real-life characters. Solid book group choice.

kmc0168's review

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4.0

The beginning was more than a little rough, but it eventually grew on me. I loved the way Rossi slowly built the romance. Very sweet.