Reviews tagging 'Pregnancy'

A Ghost In The Throat by Doireann Ní Ghríofa

25 reviews

feralbookwife's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional hopeful inspiring reflective sad medium-paced

3.75

Just when I was ready to take a break from memoirs, this one knocked my socks off. Went into this one completely blind, just liking the title and cover style, and could not have picked a more poignant book. This is a powerful, deeply honest text with lots of tears along the way. 

CW: animal death, pregnancy, birth trauma, murder, violence, sexism, mental health, autopsy 

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hanz's review against another edition

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emotional reflective medium-paced

4.0

Interesting and strange book. I think the blurb is misleading and the book is more memoir than about Eibhlín Dubh, but it is partly about the authors relationship to Eibhlín Dubh and the poem Caoineadh Art Uí Laoghaire. It is also about motherhood, pregnancy and obsession and about connecting to women throughout history. I enjoyed it!

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imaginaryisobel's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful sad

3.0

I literally went back and forth in what to rate this sm. It's beautifully written and some bits are easily 4/5 stars but other parts are so difficult to get through and are 1/2 stars. I feel like it was a bit directionless and could deffo have been much shorter but the themes and idea is really interesting 

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woweewhoa's review against another edition

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reflective slow-paced

4.5


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aisclaradm's review

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dark emotional informative reflective slow-paced

5.0

Just incredible. No words for it except incredible. 

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lifeinsherds's review

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emotional reflective sad medium-paced

5.0

This is one of those books I wish I could read for the first time again. I remember deciding to read this book because of the gorgeous cover and I haven't read a lot of Irish fiction. This novel absolutely blew me away. It's a quiet little book that makes such massive and important statements about the expectations of motherhood and growing up from a protagonist who is looking back on her own past. She further relates her own past and present limitations (and small joys) with those of an Irish poet who lived centuries before her.

Part memoir, part historical fiction, this book stunned me with every chapter. There is not one thing I would have wanted different from this book. And this is the author's prose debut!

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saintsaens's review

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reflective slow-paced

2.0

Disappointing retelling of a woman's fascination with a poem and its author. 

The poem is very interesting, the search for the woman who first sang it in memory of the assassination of her own husband and the informations found about her are as well, but 80% of the book is more interested with  how Doireann Ni Ghriofa is obsessed with being a mother and focused on her own self and her own life. 

While slight parallels can be drawn by her very poetic (at times) writing between her experience and the woman she's fascinated by, more often than not it's a digression about herself, her life as a mother and a housewife, her troubles with understanding her husband and her constant need to feel helpful. The first lines are stricking, the rest of the text is inconsistent in writing style at best. And again, the poem has nothing to do with her own self reflection, which is considerably disappointing considering the themes of the poem (passionate love, thriving against social/political pressures, murder and a woman bent on revenge in her husband's name).  In contrast, her life is painfully plain. And the text feels imbalanced as a result. 

The stars are for the wild poetic lines that are scattered in the text, the information about Eibhlín Dubh Ní Chonaill, the text of the poem. Considering what she says in the book, I'm really not partial to her own translation of the poem (how much is artistic licence? how much is her status as a woman speaking? how much is her own knowledge and understanding of the working of Gaeilge? impossible to tell). 

The book is described as "feminist". It's feminist in that it speaks about a woman. But honestly, nothing in her words and her behaviour shows a sign of understanding on the feminist movement, or maybe its bare minimum. 

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cereads's review against another edition

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challenging emotional mysterious reflective sad slow-paced

3.75


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wrackcity's review

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emotional reflective slow-paced

4.5


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qqjj's review

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challenging hopeful slow-paced

3.5


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