Ratings3
Average rating4.7
I went into this book without many expectations, and I thoroughly enjoyed this meandering, lyrical journey. It's in parts a humorous take on the world and the story of many generations of the Swain family. It's also a very tragic book that touches on how people handle grief in different ways, and how nature and the world around us play into that.
I also enjoyed how each of the “main” characters - Abraham, Virgil, and Ruth - have to reconcile their realities with their interests, and how they manage to do so. The result is wryly funny.
I knocked a star off because the meandering - while evocative of the very rain and rivers that come up so frequently in the book - eventually wore me down a bit and I felt like it became unruly.
This book made me Want All These Things.
1. Hold Every Book I Have and touch it, flip through it, look up all underlined passages and definitions of words which I did not know then, make it older, make it bear more than one story.
2. Come Back to Classics. Read Oliver Twist, Great Expectations, re-read RLS and Childhood, Boyhood, Youth by Tolstoy.
3. Buy a Ticket to the small siberian city and hold my mum and dad. And let them tell me Stories.