Kelly (and the Book Boar)'s Reviews > Where the Moon Isn't
Where the Moon Isn't
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Find all of my reviews at: http://52bookminimum.blogspot.com/
Sometimes I read books so obsessively that I end up with something like this when I’m finished:
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Then I sit around for a week (or two, or twelve) because I have no idea how to write the review.
It only seems fitting that someone like me (who clearly has an undiagnosed mental disorder) would flag the holy hell out of a book about a fellow with a mental disorder. It also seems fitting that I should let Matthew do most of the talking when it comes to telling you what this book is about.
Matthew has been raised by a mother who “is thin and pale, with cold hands. She has a broad chin that she is very self-conscious about. She sniffs the milk before she drinks it. She loves me. And she is mad.” And a father who “is tall and broad, and stoops a little. He wears a leather jacket because he used to ride a motorbike. He calls me mon ami. And he loves me.” He lived with a brother named “Simon. I think you’re going to like him. I really do. But in a couple of pages he’ll be dead. And he was never the same after that.”
Matthew was never quite the same after that, either. He’ll tell you that “you notice it when he isn’t there anymore. You notice so many of the places where he isn’t, and you hear so many of the things he doesn’t say. I do. I hear them all the time.”
Matthew will have to confront those demons of the past in order to come to terms with the reality of the present. Generally I find cover blurbs to be wholly inaccurate, but “rare and brilliant” is a very fitting description for Where the Moon Isn’t. Filer really knows how to get you into a character’s soul.
Sometimes I read books so obsessively that I end up with something like this when I’m finished:
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Then I sit around for a week (or two, or twelve) because I have no idea how to write the review.
It only seems fitting that someone like me (who clearly has an undiagnosed mental disorder) would flag the holy hell out of a book about a fellow with a mental disorder. It also seems fitting that I should let Matthew do most of the talking when it comes to telling you what this book is about.
Matthew has been raised by a mother who “is thin and pale, with cold hands. She has a broad chin that she is very self-conscious about. She sniffs the milk before she drinks it. She loves me. And she is mad.” And a father who “is tall and broad, and stoops a little. He wears a leather jacket because he used to ride a motorbike. He calls me mon ami. And he loves me.” He lived with a brother named “Simon. I think you’re going to like him. I really do. But in a couple of pages he’ll be dead. And he was never the same after that.”
Matthew was never quite the same after that, either. He’ll tell you that “you notice it when he isn’t there anymore. You notice so many of the places where he isn’t, and you hear so many of the things he doesn’t say. I do. I hear them all the time.”
Matthew will have to confront those demons of the past in order to come to terms with the reality of the present. Generally I find cover blurbs to be wholly inaccurate, but “rare and brilliant” is a very fitting description for Where the Moon Isn’t. Filer really knows how to get you into a character’s soul.
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Reading Progress
November 4, 2013
– Shelved as:
to-read
November 4, 2013
– Shelved
November 7, 2013
–
Started Reading
November 10, 2013
–
Finished Reading
November 11, 2013
–
0.97%
"I was seriously giving some consideration to putting this on the backburner in favor of some smut and then:
"The first this weeping girl was aware of me, was the entire weight of my body, gently pushing her face into a freshly dug grave."
It's got me for now. Let's see if it really is a "rare and brilliant debut"."
page
3
"The first this weeping girl was aware of me, was the entire weight of my body, gently pushing her face into a freshly dug grave."
It's got me for now. Let's see if it really is a "rare and brilliant debut"."
November 12, 2013
–
69.35%
""He gets fairly repetitive when he's been drinking, and he drinks fairly repetitively ... He lives a Cut & Paste life.""
page
215
November 12, 2013
–
100%
"Okay, I finished this and it was super good - highly recommend. However, I'm distracted and nerding out about the HP group read, so I won't be posting a review today. Gonna read porn for the remainder of the lunch hour until I get home to my bookshelf where Hogwarts awaits : )"
page
319
November 15, 2013
– Shelved as:
read-in-2013
Comments Showing 1-12 of 12 (12 new)
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message 1:
by
Sammy
(new)
Nov 16, 2013 06:25AM
Wonderful review Kelly ;o)
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I tab like that and get teased immensely for it! I'll be reading this book shortly, so I'm glad to see it's been getting such great reviews.
@ Nancy - I love reading paper books, but the one benefit of Kindle reading is no one can see all of my bookmarks ; )
I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
I completely understand this . . . I earmark all of my pages and for this book, there aren't very many pages untouched.
Love your review, completely agree!
Love your review, completely agree!
Had this tabbed for Mount TBR already but clearly need to give more attention to tracking down a copy. Terrific review, Kelly!!