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Sto caricando le informazioni... Fingersmith (originale 2002; edizione 2002)di Sarah Waters
Informazioni sull'operaLadra di Sarah Waters (2002)
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Extremely suspenseful, twisty, really good novel about a band of thieves and a host of secrets. It will keep you guessing until the end. it's the kind of book you want to re-read immediately after you finish. ( ) Excellent plot and marvelous writing. The switched identities of the principal characters are cleverly done and the plot line is intricate. The allusion to a "Dickens" style of novel is an apt one. The book is a bit longer than it needed to be, but well worth the read. The BBC series, available on Youtube and "The Handmaiden" on Prime video, are based on the book. I had previously read 'The Night Watch" by Waters and found it excellent also. Review: Fingersmith by Sarah Waters. 4* 08/30/2023 This was a well-written book. I liked the character's developments and the organization of the story. As far as the content of LGBT romance, set in the Victorian era, a scam artist, prison, and a lot of twists and turns throughout the book. The author describes Victorian London with its dark moments and Gothic atmosphere. I thought the dialogue between characters was really good and convincing. The author also concentrates mainly on the plot which admittedly is very strong. I also like some of the secondary characters such as "Gentleman" and Mrs. "Sucksby". Their roles in the story were so creative and enhanced the story delightfully. There were so many events happening page after page that I didn't want to put the book down. I read over some pages twice to make sure I didn't miss something. Sarah Waters is a great historian writer and a mastermind of creativity when writing her stories. Big "what the fuck did I just read" energy. I thought this was going to be dark, and it started that way before going for some soap opera twists which nevertheless worked for me. Wish the guy (Richard Rivers) didn't have such a prominent role; he pushes the leads so hard to betray each other that it ends up feeling like it's his fault entirely, when I'd like them to have both been a little worse people. But I was very happy with the ending. It’s hard to review this historical thriller without spoilers, because much of the fun is in the twists and turns of the plot as the various characters and their machinations are revealed. It’s well-done, too. I wasn’t able to correctly guess any of them, at least until the very end. But this is not only a cleverly plotted story. It is peopled with interesting characters, none of whom are wholly sympathetic. This is not a book for readers who want at least one likable character that they can identify with. But I was able to connect, to empathize to some extent, with several of them, for they were well-drawn and all very human. For me, that is the best kind of book. I did find it a little weak at the end, where events do tie up a little too neatly for my taste. Audiobook, purchased via Audible. Juanita McMahon’s performance was excellent. I read this for the 2017 Booklikes-opoly challenge, for the square Paradise Pier 30: Read a book with a twist, or that is tagged “suspense” on GR, or that has more than 555 pages. This book meets not just one, but all three criteria. Previous Updates: 5/28/17 40% Wow. Just, wow. I knew there was a twist coming. I expected it. I anticipated it. I had about 3 theories about it. And it still took me completely by surprise. Take a bow, Ms. Waters, that was amazing. Now I can't wait to gobble up the rest of this book. 5/29/17 56% It is amazing to me that at one time, "doctors" genuinely believed that providing a woman with an education and allowing her to read novels could cause insanity. And given the state of mental health care at the time, I think I'd have rather pretended to be stupid and uninformed than to be permanently committed to an insane asylum. 5/30/17 76% "We have a name for your disease. We call it a hyper-aesthetic one. You have been encouraged to overindulge yourself in literature and have inflamed your organs of fancy!" This would be hilarious if it wasn't a historically accurate portrayal of psychiatry.
Queen Victoria, while accepting homosexuality in men, is said not to have been able to believe lesbians existed. Sarah Waters sets out once again to prove Her Majesty wrong in her latest novel, Fingersmith, set - as her other two novels, Tipping the Velvet and Affinity - in Victorian London. This is hardly niche writing - or even erotic fiction, although the few love scenes are tenderly drawn. It is instead a tremendous read that draws the reader swiftly into the teeming life that thrived underneath the various repressions of the Victorian era. let's just say that Dickens, the great performer of his own work, would surely have blushed to read it. Appartiene alle Collane EditorialiTEAdue [TEA ed.] (1457) Ha l'adattamentoPremi e riconoscimentiMenzioniElenchi di rilievo
Growing up as a foster child among a family of thieves, orphan Sue Trinder hopes to pay back that kindness by playing a key role in a swindle scheme devised by their leader, who is planning to con a fortune out of the naive Maud Lilly. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)823.914Literature English English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999Classificazione LCVotoMedia:
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