Reviews

Melting Moments by Anna Goldsworthy

scholarhect's review against another edition

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4.0

This was just lovely - particularly if you grew up (as I did) in semi-rural Australia with parents and grandparents of a certain era. It may not be a groundbreaking literary masterpiece but it’s warm, touching, and relatable. 

belinda's review

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slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes

4.0

steph_84's review against another edition

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3.0

3.5 stars rounded down. Beautifully written with convincing characters and an interesting insight into suburban life across the 20th century, but I found myself wanting more. What happened to Arthur during the war? What did Ruby - or do we - learn from Bill other than what she’s missed out on? What is moral of or values beneath the story? Some mystery adds to intrigue but in the absence of resolution I would at least like some more explicit questions for us to ponder or quandaries to ponder within our own lives, as with other books I’ve recently read that follow women through the decades, such as “Mrs Everything” or “Girl, Woman, Other”. Also I struggled to relate to Ruby (meandering along, so focussed on keeping up appearances at the expense of her own happiness or wellbeing of her kids), but maybe that says more about me than the book.

“Melting Moments” aims to be quiet and real - and it is - but for me it doesn’t leave enough behind for the reader to reflect on or savour. Good perhaps for readers who enjoy quiet Australian literature.

darladark's review against another edition

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5.0

I really loved this book. It is quite simple but the writing is incredible

kimswhims's review against another edition

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4.0

4.5 Stars
This was a quick but affecting read. I was caught off guard but I should have been prepared for it with the book being blurbed by esteemed Australian authors of the like of Joan London and Alex Miller.

Filled with quiet comforting nostalgia, it's the story of a gentle life filled with comfort and endless family duty. I felt like it could have been a story recounted by my Grandmothers and my 74 year old Mum around the kitchen table over endless cups of tea.
Gently beautiful and quite restorative.

meganori's review against another edition

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3.0

I couldn't get into this although I glimpsed some greatness. Not sure if it was the book itself or just covid.

theresapetray's review against another edition

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hopeful reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

ookie's review against another edition

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5.0

I loved this novel. Anna Goldsworthy writes with tenderness and restraint. Beautiful.

stefhyena's review against another edition

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2.0

I got through it. A sentimental waste of good writing ability. I hung on for about the first half thinking it was going somewhere, thinking it would interrupt it's own phallocentrism and compulsory heterosexuality. I don't mean go fully queer but just let Ruby centre herself and female relationships for a change.

It beginnings in a frustrating wedding night that is given us in an amount of detail not spent on things like birth, careers or pretty much anything apart from marital sex (and voyeurism) in the novel. This centres the book on the disappointment to be found in penises, the eternal deferral of women's desire which nevertheless seems to relentlessly centre back on men. Ruby has a job at one point - about a paragraph is spent on that. But Ruby making herself beautiful for faceless, personality less women and especially for men is at the centre as is Ruby putting herself last to look after Arthur's desires and tropishly horrible mother and Ruby returning again and again to dreams of Bill (I think it was). There is reflection in the book about what is a woman and what is a man and the conclusions are very unsatisfactory even for the generation they are concluded for.

I am not arguing that women did not have a life much like Ruby's centred on the family, on the house, on domesticity. I just argue with the lack of art, culture, literature, career, philosophy, spirituality or anything else- there is a garden but even that seems more domestic than an interest. Surely her inner self should have glimpses of something other than unselfish wife vs potential cheating wife (which she did not attempt to enact). I also wonder where are any female relationships other than mother-daughter? Why is her sister side-lined so early? Why are her friends just foils for meeting men or showing off her superior beauty? Why after the horrible mother in law dies must the next potential female relationship (the neighbour) also become one of enmity? This reads like a long-winded advert for the phallocentric life with it's sentimental conclusions always that disappointment is OK because it is infused with love and with making Eva's challenges of the status quo both failures and short-lived.

We hear of Eva's marriage and child. She had given up her career for these. Very late in the book it is mentioned that she'd gone back to her career. That's an afterthought not the focus, Ruby keeps musing back to Ned. What of Charlie? Does he have a partner or children? We are not told. One sentence looks like it might be steering us toward him being gay but probably that was just my wish to interrupt the stereotypical view for a second. We are simply not told about his personal life because men are defined (in the book) by deeds/occupations. Women are defined by who they marry or fail to be married to and who they beget.

I do think the writing itself was good and I was so wishing for a book set in Adelaide. I have read a few books of Adelaide and they are always so backward looking (ideologically). I'd be keen for a progressive or speculative book set in Adelaide but this wasn't it.

wtb_michael's review against another edition

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3.0

A gentle, lovely novel that tells the story of a woman's life as the 21st century unfurls around her. It felt a bit flat at the start, but it got richer and deeper as it went on.
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