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The novel follows this family -- whose punning surname really is "Story" -- through the tumultuous course of their lives, and takes place in nearly magical realms: seaside Long Island, New York City, Paris. If there is grief enough to spare, blow after blow of unbearable loss, moments of grace also abound, and Hoffman keeps pulling characters out of her sleeve till the final pages of book -- a sure sign of a master of fiction. (Doestoevsky always has one 11th-hour heroine or villain in his toolbox; so, too, does Dickens.) Even the most minor characters leave an indelible impression, like these two ominous counselors at a private school for wayward youth: "They seemed like prizefighters or bouncers in a nightclub. They wore black rain jackets and work boots. They were standing in the rain, waiting. If Annie could have felt anything, she might have been flooded with second thoughts. She might have made Alan turn the car around. But she was paralyzed."
Hoffman brilliantly delineates the face of bereavement in the aftermath of a family disaster: mother and sister "stayed home all winter. They didn't shovel the snow on the walkway....They wandered into the kitchen and grabbed a bite of cheese or a cracker. They didn't trouble to use dishes anymore, only ate standing up, crouched over the sink or using paper napkins. They reminded Natalia of the dogs one sometimes saw in certain neighborhoods of Paris, wild and uncared for, dangerous to the touch." Hoffman's spare, terse method of constructing sentences adds to the haunting quality of the book and underscores its poetry. ("She wasn't the least bit spooked when the leaves on the trees rattled, always a sign of rain. The rain in Paris was beautiful, anyway, cold and clean and green.")
Elv, the ravaged, angry heroine of the book, is especially memorable, both in her disintegration and in her efforts to redeem herself. Her name suggests her connection to a magical, alternative world, and her personality seems even to her mother a thorny mystery: "Her oldest girl sat up in the hawthorn tree late at night; she said she was looking at stars, but she was there even on cloudy nights, her black hair even blacker against the sky. Annie was certain that people who said daughters were easy had never had girls of their own." Elv's difficulties evolve from childhood eccentricity to self-mutilation to drug addiction. Even as a young girl she is wary, for good reason. Her exceptional beauty proves both a blessing and a curse.
Elv put her sweater on, even though the room was quite warm. The waiter had been skulking around, trying to get close to her, breathing on her hair, looking at her as if he knew something.
"Did you want something?" Mary Fox asked him.
"Don't talk to him," Elv said.
The sisters escape from the brutality of the real world around them to a made-up world they call Arnelle, with its own language, characters, and customs.
Arnelle was everything the human world was not. Speech was unnecessary. Treachery was out of the question. It was a world where no one could take you by surprise or tell you a mouthful of lies. You could see someone's heart through his chest and know if he was a goblin, a mortal, or a true hero. You could divine a word's essence by a halo of color -- red was false, white was true, yellow was the foulest of lies. There were no ropes to tie you, no stale bread, no one to shut and lock the door.
True heroes are rare in The Story Sisters, out-and-out villains even rarer, but not a single character fails to come to life under Hoffman's capable hand. As with any good story, one encounters birth and death, surprise twists of fate. Lovable characters sometimes come to terrible ends, and terrible characters turn themselves toward good. The justice one encounters in this world is more like the justice of the Grimm Brothers than the justice of a contemporary court of law. Speech and speechlessness, love and lovelessness do battle, as do primal forces of good and of evil. The book does flounder at times in the second half, pulled down by the weight of its own cumulative disasters. One or two plot twists ring false. But ultimately, Hoffman earns all of her dark moments.
Like sisters in a fairy tale, these three have their impossible tasks to accomplish: "one to find love, one to find peace, one to find herself." If one can bear the darkness of the journey, Alice Hoffman offers a remarkable new telling of an old, enduring story. -- Liz Rosenberg
Liz Rosenberg is the author of the novel Home Repair, published in May 2009 by HarperAvon, and of two recent books of poems, Demon Love (Mammoth Books) and The Lily Poems (Bright Hills). A book columnist for The Boston Globe, she also teaches English and Creative Writing at the State University of New York at Binghamton.
1Katherine1
Posted September 3, 2009
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I have loved all of Alice Hoffman's books, I've been reading her for years and years. This book is mature, full of great beauty and of sadness, like life. The sadness is the lesson that people who victimize children not only hurt the children but all the people around them, for years to come. The beauty, the strong point in all Hoffman's books is finding magic in nature, in spirit, and the people around us. I hope this one wins her the Pulitzer.
12 out of 12 people found this review helpful.
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Posted September 6, 2009
It's Elizabeth Berg meets Jodi Picoult with a touch of haunting plot twists. This book was so disturbing that, when I got to a particular part on the book with yet ANOTHER reference to animal abuse, I threw it in the recycling bin. I didn't even want to donate it or pass it along. This made my nighttime reading habit very dismal, and I found it depressing. From a literary standpoint, however, Alice Hoffman addresses head-on the permanent consequences of temporary acts, and she delves into the behavioral changes and emotional tumult of a family in crisis with startling precision.
3 out of 5 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Alice Hoffman is an author known for her novels filled with magical touches. Her latest, The Story Sisters, continues that, when a magical world created by three sisters collides with the reality of the world in which we all exist.
Elizabeth, called Elv, Meg and Claire Story live with their mother in a small town on Long Island. Their parents are in the middle of a bad divorce, and it has affected the girls deeply. When they were young children, Elv (whose nickname connotes the fairy-like elves) created a fairy tale world, Arnelle, which had its own language. It slightly concerned their mother Annie when they would continue to speak this language, even as they grew out of childhood.
This fantasy world contrasts with the physical world in which they live. Annie has a large garden, and grows heirloom tomatoes. The girls are knowledgeable in all areas tomato. They love animals. Elv is artistic, attracted to painting and color. Meg is a voracious reader, and a very good student. They sleep in the same bedroom, and are each other's best friends.
The horrors of the real world intrude on the girls of Arnelle when a bad man hurts Elv, who saves the younger Claire from his clutches. They never tell anyone about "the day the bad thing happened", not even Meg. This bad thing, and her reluctance to tell her mother, causes Elv to act out. Annie is struggling too, "she felt as if everything she did was in halves: half a mother, half a teacher, half a woman". In that one sentence, Hoffman articulates the feelings of so many women.
Elv begins to believe "that evil repelled evil, while good collected it", and she is determined to become evil in order to expel it from her life. She uses drugs, becomes promiscuous, steals- everything a young woman with low self esteem does to dull her pain. Meg is angered by her sister's behavior, but Claire vows to remain loyal to Elv. Elv's behavior breaks the bonds of sisterhood she so tenderly nurtured.
Hoffman uses imagery and metaphors so beautifully. When Elv saves a kitten thrown into a river, she tells Claire that she is haunted because she couldn't save a second kitten thrown in. Claire reminds her that it is important that she saved one, but Elv can't get over that she couldn't save the other, echoing the fact that she saved Claire once, but was unable to save herself.
The author's writing hits home with the reader, as when following a death, Annie's cousin says,"Call me the minute you need something," she told Annie and Claire, but neither of them could think of a single thing they might need that anyone could possibly give them. Everyone who has lost someone knows that exact feeling.
This is a moving, haunting novel that will make you cry. There is so much sadness, so many tragic things that happen, and we all know people about whom we say, "haven't they suffered enough?" About a good man who becomes involved with the Story family, Hoffman writes: "He stayed in the kitchen with the dog for a while. He covered his face and wept. When he was done, he patted Shiloh's head. This wasn't his house or his family or his dog, but it was his sorrow."
Hoffman broke my heart with this beautiful story of how secrets can destroy, but ultimately about the power of love to redeem. I became deeply invested in her characters, and will not be able to get them out of my thoughts. It is so powerful, so moving, it is the best of what fiction is.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.NYbookster
Posted June 5, 2009
The Story Sisters is an unforgettable novel, half fairytale, half real life. I couldn't put it down. I rushed to get to the end and now I want to read it again, slowly.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted August 19, 2009
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"The Story Sisters" is a wonderful book. Once you continue reading it, you become immediately sucked into the fantasy/real world of Elv, Meg, and Claire. The book is divided into 3 acts and it has an unexpected twist. It's great to read before you go to bed. I think everyone can relate to at least one of the three sisters in some way or another. The story explores all emotions from depression, sadness, love, and in the end, happiness. Probably the only flaw is that sometimes the dialogue between the characters is a little corny/over dramatic. Read it slowly to enjoy it!!!!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted August 8, 2009
This is the best book that I have read in over a year. I couldn't put this book down and, when I wasn't reading it, I kept thinking about the characters. This is a very real and believable story. It is one of those books that you read and you know that you will always remember the characters.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted August 4, 2009
Alice Hoffman knows exactly how to break my heart. I was drawn to this novel, in part because Hoffman is one of my favorite writers, but mainly because the subject of sisters hits so close to home for me. This novel is so beautifully written and the characters are vibrant and original. Watching each character meet her individual fate is heart wrenching, yet I couldn't put it down. This book reminded me that while the world is full of sadness, it is also full of small triumphs and that it is the small moments of happiness that make life worth living.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Alice Hoffman weaves an imaginative story. Elv, Meg and Clare are wonderful characters, distinctive in their own stories as they grow up. Elv and Clare are forever bonded by something terrible that happens which cause Elv to pull apart from her family which seems to be the only way she can deal with it. Hoffman is trully a wonderful writer in that she is able to weave a mystical quality into her stories. Happy ending don't always happen no matter how much you want them to. I also loved how the grandmother is the hero as all grandmother's show grace and patience through their experience. This was a great book and I reccomend it to anyone who is a Hoffman fan. It will not disappoint.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.I'm a adament reader of Hoffman's books and she still doesn't disappoint. Far from it. The Story Sisters is yet another story that reminds me why Alice Hoffman is one of my favorite authors. The way she writes and weaves and paints the story is literally a work of art.
I found that even though the three sisters are different, each of them had traits that I could relate too. It shows how even the people you love do both great and horrible things and the realistic fight to still love them.
After everything that happened, the ending was very satisfying.
Well, I'm off to find another Alice Hoffman book. Cheers.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.I haven't read anything by Alice Hoffman before, but I plan to after reading this. From the first chapter, I could not put it down. I am very hard to please when it comes to books (being an English literature and Creative Writing major will do that...) and very rarely find a book that impresses me so much. The writing syle was remarkable, language fresh, and so original. You must read this book!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Alice Hoffman is one of my favorite authors and I have read all of her books over and over again, even the young adult books.
Unfortunately, this book, The Story Sisters did not provide the right entertainment for me. All through the book I kept asking myself, Why am I still reading this?
It was sad and dark. Her characters were wonderful especially when the three sisters were young and then it took a dark turn after the first 100 pages.
I wanted a read that left me feeling hope and goodness prevailed. I was, instead, left sad and depressed.
I gave it three stars for writing and originality.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted December 26, 2011
I really loved this book! Each character had depth and flaws. Hoffman did a great job in having the characters grow and change before the reader's eyes . Definetely recommend it.
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Posted December 22, 2011
I really enjoyed this book. It is well written and an easy read, although the story line is a bit dark. I read this for a book club and we had quite a bit to discuss. Evryone in the group like the book
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Posted December 16, 2011
I really like this book because I am the oldest sister of three girls. I think what Hoffman was trying to point out was that even if all girls were in a same situation and had the same lifestyle, they still wound up differently. This I would very much agree with.
And to the person that said something about animal abuse, I really don't know what positive light that was put on the subject. I think you just wanted an excuse to not read a book.
Anonymous
Posted December 16, 2011
This book was hard to put down and when you had to the characters staid with you. I can't wait to see what else she has written.
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Posted November 28, 2011
Seriously. Read it.
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Posted November 6, 2011
I want to read more of her books after reading this one.
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Posted October 11, 2011
This is a sad story but it is very beautifully written and addicting. I couldn't get into it at first but once you get past the first chapter or so it is amazing. I would reread this book. The characters are likable and the story lines are so interesting. Once again, Alice Hoffman is an amazing author.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted October 11, 2011
While I uusually love Hoffman, I couldn't figure out what she was trying to tell me. Fionally gave up.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.This is a book that should come with a warning. It is beyond sad. If you are in any way depressed do not read this book. It is beautifully written, but I got so annoyed with how downtrodden, miserable and ineffective everyone was. The only way anyone got better or made any improvement in their lives was through working with animals. Human love and caring was admired, but not useful. Alice Hoffman is an amazing writer, lyrical descriptions, strong characters, but she never let these girls have one nice moment til the bitter end.
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Overview
From the New York Times BestsellingAuthor of The Third Angel
Alice Hoffman’s previous novel, The Third Angel, was hailed as "an unforgettable portrait of the depth of true love" (USA Today), "stunning" (Jodi Picoult), and "spellbinding" (Miami Herald). Her new novel, The Story Sisters, charts the lives of three sisters–Elv, Claire, and Meg. Each has a fate she must meet alone: one on a country road, one in the streets of Paris, and one in the corridors of her own imagination. Inhabiting their world are a charismatic man who cannot tell the truth, a neighbor who is not who he appears...