Some widows face their loss with denial. Sophie Stanton's reaction is one of pure bafflement. "How can I be a widow?" Sophie asks at the opening of Lolly Winston's sweet debut novel, Good Grief. "I'm only thirty-six. I just got used to the idea of being married." Sophie's young widowhood forces her to do all kinds of crazy things--drive her car through her garage door, for instance. That's on one of the rare occasions when she bothers to get out of bed. The Christmas season especially terrifies her: "I must write a memo to the Minister of Happier Days requesting that the holidays be cancelled this year." But widowhood also forces her to do something very sane. After the death of her computer programmer husband, she reexamines her life as a public relations agent in money-obsessed Silicon Valley. Sophie decides to ease her grief, or at least her loneliness, by moving in with her best friend Ruth in Ashland, Oregon. But it's her difficult relationship with psycho teen punker Crystal, to whom she becomes a Big Sister, that mysteriously brings her at least a few steps out of her grief. Winston allows Sophie life after widowhood: The novel almost indiscernibly turns into a gentle romantic comedy and a quirky portrait of life in an artsy small town. At all stops on her journey from widow to survivor, Sophie is a lively, crabby, delightfully imperfect character.
--Claire Dederer
"The grief is up already. It is an early riser, waiting with its gummy arms wrapped around my neck, its hot, sour breath in my ear." Sophie Stanton feels far too young to be a widow, but after just three years of marriage, her wonderful husband, Ethan, succumbs to cancer. With the world rolling on, unaware of her pain, Sophie does the only sensible thing: she locks herself in her house and lives on what she can buy at the convenience store in furtive midnight shopping sprees. Everything hurts—the telemarketers asking to speak to Ethan, mail with his name on it, his shirts, which still smell like him. At first Sophie is a "good" widow, gracious and melancholy, but after she drives her car through the garage door, something snaps; she starts showing up at work in her bathrobe and hiding under displays in stores. Her boss suggests she take a break, so she sells her house and moves to Ashland, Ore., to live with her best friend, Ruth, and start over. Grief comes along, too—but with a troubled, pyromaniac teen assigned to her by a volunteer agency, a charming actor dogging her and a new job prepping desserts at a local restaurant, Sophie is forced to explore the misery that has consumed her. Throughout this heartbreaking, gorgeous look at loss, Winston imbues her heroine and her narrative with the kind of grace, bitter humor and rapier-sharp realness that will dig deep into a reader's heart and refuse to let go. Sophie is wounded terribly, but she's also funny, fresh and utterly believable. There's nary a moment of triteness in this outstanding debut.
Sophie Stanton goes from newlywed to widow in just three short years of marriage, her competent and confident persona replaced by an Oreo-munching, robe-and-slipper-clad zombie. Overwhelmed by grief and despair, out of a job, home, and clothes that fit, Sophie leaves her high-pressure, memory-laden Silicon Valley lifestyle for a laid-back Oregon village. In her metamorphosis from bereft widow to beguiling woman, Sophie is aided by an unlikely ally: Crystal, a street-smart but emotionally damaged teenager she befriends as part of a "Big Sisters" program. If there are stages to the mourning process, Winston gets them all down perfectly, communicating Sophie's misery with a poignant empathy. Those who have experienced such loss will surely recognize themselves in some part of Sophie's transformative journey; those who haven't will hope to demonstrate as much grit, wit, and charm as Winston's lovable heroine. Tackling a difficult subject in a debut novel is a gutsy move, and Winston pulls it off with just the right blend of heartfelt humor and heartwarming humanity.
Carol Haggas
length: (cm)17 width:(cm)12
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我必须承认,这本书带给我的是一种前所未有的阅读体验,它让我重新审视了“阅读”这件事本身的意义。作者的文字功底毋庸置疑,他能够用最简单的词语描绘出最复杂的情感,用最日常的场景唤醒最深刻的记忆。这本书的节奏把握得非常巧妙,时而如潺潺流水般细腻,时而又如奔腾的江河般激昂。我感觉自己就像置身于一条船上,随着作者的笔触,在不同的情绪海洋中起伏。那些对人物内心世界的细腻刻画,让我感同身受,仿佛他们就是我身边的朋友,他们的喜怒哀乐都与我息息相关。我特别欣赏作者在处理情感上的那种克制与爆发并存的张力,它让情感的表达更加真实,更加具有力量。这本书并不是那种会给你明确答案的作品,它更多的是抛出问题,引导你去思考,去探索。它像一面镜子,照出了我内心深处的某些角落,让我有机会去审视和理解自己。
评分这无疑是一本让我感到惊喜的作品。我通常不太喜欢那些过于说教或者矫揉造作的书籍,但这本书的风格完全不同。作者的文字带着一种天然的亲切感,仿佛是在和你娓娓道来一个发生在身边的故事。我喜欢他那种不疾不徐的叙事节奏,让我在阅读的过程中感受到一种宁静和放松。他对人物心理的描绘非常到位,每一个角色的塑造都立体而饱满,让我能够清晰地感受到他们的情感变化和内心挣扎。书中的情节发展虽然不是惊心动魄,但却充满了人生的智慧和生活的哲理。我常常会在某个章节读到一半,就忍不住停下来,回味之前的内容,思考作者想要传达的深层含义。这本书让我意识到,有时候,最动人的故事,就发生在最平凡的生活中。它就像一盏温暖的灯,在黑暗中指引着我,让我能够更清晰地看到前行的方向。
评分这本书的封面设计就足够吸引我了,那种淡淡的、带着些许忧郁的蓝色调,搭配着简洁却非常有力量的字体,仿佛在诉说着一个不为人知的故事。我迫不及待地翻开了第一页,期待着一段能够触动心灵的旅程。作者的文字就像一首舒缓的诗,字里行间流淌着一种难以言喻的情感,时而细腻婉转,时而又带着一股坚韧的力量。我发现自己很容易就沉浸其中,仿佛置身于一个截然不同的世界,与书中的人物一同呼吸,一同感受。他们的一颦一笑,一举一动,都在我脑海中勾勒出一幅幅生动的画面。我尤其喜欢作者对细节的描绘,那些看似微不足道的场景,却能引起我内心深处最柔软的共鸣。有时候,我会在某个句子面前停顿良久,反复咀嚼其中的深意,思考它所传递的某种哲学。这本书不是那种能够让你在几个小时内一口气读完的作品,它需要你放慢脚步,细细品味,让文字的香气在心中慢慢散开。每一次翻开,都能发现新的惊喜,新的感悟。它就像一个老朋友,每次见面都会给你带来不一样的温暖和启迪。
评分这绝对是一本能够颠覆你阅读体验的书。开篇就以一种极具冲击力的方式展开,立刻抓住了我的注意力。作者的叙事风格非常大胆,充满了实验性,不断地挑战着传统的叙事模式。我常常会因为意想不到的转折而感到惊叹,又因为某些章节的跳跃性而需要反复思考。这种不确定性反而让阅读过程充满了刺激和期待。我喜欢这种能够不断给我带来惊喜的作品,它让我意识到,原来故事可以这样讲,情感可以这样表达。书中对于人性深处的挖掘,既真实又深刻,让我不得不面对一些一直以来被我忽略或回避的方面。我感觉自己仿佛在进行一场内心的探险,每一次阅读都像是在揭开一层又一层的迷雾,最终看到那个隐藏在深处的真相。有时候,我会感到些许的不安,但更多的是一种被震撼后的敬畏。作者的文字具有一种魔力,它能够穿透表象,直抵人心的最脆弱也是最坚韧的地方。这本书绝对不是轻松的读物,它需要你付出思考,付出情感,但回报也是巨大的。
评分一本能够让人在阅读过程中不断产生共鸣的书,往往是最值得推荐的。这本书就是这样。从第一个字开始,我就被作者的文字深深吸引。他笔下的人物,活灵活现,仿佛就站在我的面前,用他们的语言,他们的故事,与我进行着一场跨越时空的对话。我特别喜欢作者对生活细节的捕捉,那些看似微不足道的瞬间,却充满了深刻的哲理和动人的情感。我常常会在某个句子面前停下来,反复品味,然后在心中默默点头,仿佛找到了自己一直以来想要表达,却无法找到合适词语的感受。这本书并不是那种轰轰烈烈的叙事,它更像是一种静水流深,在不知不觉中,悄悄地触动你内心最柔软的部分。它没有华丽的辞藻,没有刻意的煽情,但它所传递的情感,却比任何浮夸的表达都更加真挚,更加动人。我感觉这本书就像一杯温水,在寒冷的冬日里,暖暖地滋润着我的心田。
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