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Hood di Emma Donoghue
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Hood (originale 1995; edizione 1998)

di Emma Donoghue

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
4791351,106 (3.67)42
Kate Wall is flying to Dublin for the funeral of her younger sister Cara. Staying with her sedentary father and sister's housemate Pen, Kate comes to realize several things: that Pen and Cara were lovers, that she herself is more Irish than she thought and that the past is ever present.
Utente:susanbooks
Titolo:Hood
Autori:Emma Donoghue
Info:Alyson Books (1998), Paperback, 320 pages
Collezioni:La tua biblioteca
Voto:****
Etichette:fiction, queer, Ireland

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Hood di Emma Donoghue (1995)

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» Vedi le 42 citazioni

Really beautiful writing and an interesting premise. I think it might just not be the book for me? I like books with plots. It was pretty boring and slow and the sex scenes were so unnecessarily graphic. It was like 50% descriptions of things I don't care about, 30% erotica, 20% flashbacks of their relationship, and 0% plot. ( )
  ninagl | Jan 7, 2023 |
I did care about the characters and their complex lives I was uninterested in their dialect and the details of their sex lives ad infinitum. If this had been about heterosexuals, I would not have finished it. I did appreciate much of Donoghue's writing. ( )
  suesbooks | Jun 29, 2022 |
I read this book as part of a challenge to read outside of my normal genres. It won the American Library Association’s Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Book Award for Literature so it fit one of the categories I needed to fill. It is the story of a young woman morning the sudden loss of her partner of the last 13 years. The story only takes place during one week, however, there are a great deal of flashbacks during that week. I thought that would make for a great love story but to me, it fell way short. Admittedly, the sex scenes were too detailed and uncomfortable so I found myself speed reading through most of them but I don’t think that affected my opinion. I think the author did a good job on the effects of the main character living in the closet with her job and family and thus having to mourn a best friend rather than a lover/spouse but missed many opportunities to show love and instead chose lust. She also seemed to prefer to cheapen the relationship with affairs by one of the women rather than have more romance. Overall, I’m glad I stepped out of my comfort zone but wish I had picked a better book.
( )
  lynnski723 | Dec 31, 2016 |
"I had never noticed before that the official title of the ‘Lord have mercy’ prayer was the gracious phrase ‘Invitation to Sorrow’. Hey there, Sorrow, how’ve you been keeping? Come on in. If your bike doesn’t have lights you can always crash on our sofa tonight. Oh, so you’ll be staying a while, Sorrow? Planning to get to know me better? Grand, so. There’s tea in the pot."

Hood is my third foray into the works of Emma Donoghue. Neither of my two previous attempts to engage with her writing have been, what I would call, successful. It's not that her books did not make an impression on me, it's just that the impression I got from her writing strongly reminded of a caricature character of a feminist pop singer in Father Ted.

The reason I still read Hood was because I accidentally downloaded it onto the kindle. Oh, well.

To my surprise, Hood I actually was quite an interesting story of the closeted relationship between Pen and Cara, set in Dublin during the early 1990s.
I will not come as much of a spoiler if I say that the book deals with Pen's coming to terms with the end of this relationship and in the process finding herself.

In a lot of ways, Hood reminded me of Greene's The End of the Affair, and I was wondering a couple of times if Greene's classic had had any influence on Hood. In hindsight, I doubt there was an influence, tho. Where Greene's story focuses on a character who is obsessed with himself and projects this on his lost lover, Hood's story begins with a story of Pen's obsession with Cara and materialises into Pen finding confidence in herself by having to interact with the world around her as an individual rather than as part of a couple.

There were a couple of aspects that I thought were great to read in addition of Pen's story: One was the description of Pen's and Cara's relationship in the context of Ireland in the early 1990s, in which the presence of the Catholic Church seemed to be ubiquitous (which did not help my trying to shake off the Father Ted impression I have).
Donoghue's description of people being on their guard in public and fearing for their jobs if they lived outwardly in same-sex relationships created an atmosphere of pretty tense isolation.

"What seemed like hundreds of strangers were clustered by the door to commiserate with Mr Wall as we struggled out. He was introducing Kate to many who would remember her only as the dark girl, the one who went off to the States with her mother and never came back. I held back, not wanting to hear him fumble for a title for me."

By the end of the book however, I was not sure whether this description was a representation of the times or whether it was used more as a plot device. Without going into detail, the end of the book seemed to indicate that some of the isolation may have existed in Pen's perception more than in the community around her. But then, Pen's reality is her perception, isn't it.

The second aspect that I found interesting was the way in which Pen's perception changes. Again, without spoiling the plot, Pen's grieving process was pretty realistic. It was both funny and sad to see her go through it.

‘It’s a very long story.’ The words glided out of my mouth, surprising me. ‘I’ll tell you when the tea’s made.’ This birth is long overdue, mother. It’ll be a tight squeeze. You’d better open your arms to this screaming red bundle, because it’s the only one I’ll ever bring you. ‘Grand,’ she said. ‘I’ll open a packet of biscuits.’

While all of this was fascinating, I still can only say that as a whole I liked the book. But just that.

Despite the setting and the character development, there were also aspects I really did not care for.

The first one was that despite the strong background setting, I never got the feeling that the novel rose to a level of literary excellence. While reading, I always had the feeling that I accidentally picked up a clumsily written installment of a steamy pulp romance series. This didn't work for me. I should clarify that there is nothing amiss with a steamy pulp romance but it was not what I was looking for in Hood.
What annoyed me more about this than the clumsy writing, tho, was that it distracted from the issues that had been touched on and that could have been elaborated on - like the relationship with Pen's mother or Mr Wall, or Kate.
But no, instead, Pen suddenly, and seemingly out of nowhere, obsesses about someone she only just met - Cara's sister?

I just didn't get it. ( )
  BrokenTune | Aug 21, 2016 |
Audiobook returned to Audible.

It is very rare that I abandon a book, even more unlikely if it's an audio-book. However, this book, written many years before Emma Donoghue's fantastic book, Room, did not live up to expectations at all. I was listening to it on a long haul flight and I found I was just not engaging with the characters at all. The narrative seemed dragged out and slow and served only to send me to sleep, which, under the circumstances, was fine.

The central relationship is between two women, Cara and Pen. When Cara is killed in a traffic accident, Pen is left to mourn privately, as only their immediate friends even knew they were a couple. She mulls over past events and meets up with some of Cara's old friends. When it was revealed that Cara had been having other relationships outside her affair with Pen, I lost interest completely. I don't particularly enjoy lesbian literature and this was just too slow and sorry for itself, and I really couldn't like Cara, even when she was still a child.

I gave it a good try, 30%. ( )
  DubaiReader | Oct 1, 2014 |
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» Aggiungi altri autori (1 potenziale)

Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Emma Donoghueautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
Alsberg, RebeccaTraduttoreautore secondarioalcune edizioniconfermato

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Ik hield het pad aan, hield de kap verborgen, hield wat hij verhulde al helemaal verborgen. Ik gaf het alleen 's nachts bloot, met andere vrouwen die misschien over hetzelfde pad naar het huis van hun oma liepen, allemaal met hun eigen mandje lekkers.

Olga Broumas 'Roodkapje
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Mayday in 1980, heat sealing my fingers together.
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Kate Wall is flying to Dublin for the funeral of her younger sister Cara. Staying with her sedentary father and sister's housemate Pen, Kate comes to realize several things: that Pen and Cara were lovers, that she herself is more Irish than she thought and that the past is ever present.

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