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Most helpful customer reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars
Corny,
By
This review is from: Dancing Naked at the Edge of Dawn (Paperback)
The premise of the book sounded intriguing. A woman finding her husband in their bed with another woman, the inevitable divorce, and beginning of new life for the woman. Same old story but some books do better than others with this. This one did poorly. The book started out interestingly enough but then quickly devolved into a lot of corny subplots and dialogue. The author is reknown for her writings on empowering women and women's friendships - topics I strongly believe in. But how those themes are treated in this book is disappointing. Does the author know that INTELLIGENT women read these books? Altho the themes are universal and powerful, the level of conveying that in the book was often shallow and silly. Also I am tired of books that equate empowerment with divorce. This book glorifies divorce. Hello! There are some of us out there who are married AND empowered......! The only reason I gave this 2 stars instead of 1 is that there are some quotes about courage that were worth recording in my journal.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
3.6 out of 5 stars (31 customer reviews) 27 of 30 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not Chick lit and not for everyone,
By L. Allison "Bibliophile" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Dancing Naked at the Edge of Dawn (Paperback)
This is not Chick Lit. And it is not a book for everyone. Many will say that it is full of purple prose, that the author used 20 words where one would do. That there are sexual over tones in the book. All true, but none of these things spoil the message or journey of the book. I loved the whole thing. So, if you are a strong women of the world, filled with confidence and have done what ever you wanted to when you wanted to then skip this book. You have already made the journey.But, if you are like me, waiting, waiting, to loose 10 pounds, or for the children to grow up, or until a few more bills are paid, or if you are waiting for a Man to come into your life and rescue you, perhaps this book is just right for you. Amazingly descriptive, lovely, elegant, thoughtful and filled with pathos, camaraderie, bonding between girl friends and discovery. I have always wanted to dance naked at the edge of dawn but have always felt I needed to loose a few pounds first. Don't wait, life is passing, the time for dancing is the present. Take this book into your life, and enjoy it. 13 of 14 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars
Chick-lit for Grown-ups,
By Denise H. - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Dancing Naked at the Edge of Dawn (Paperback)
This book was an engaging read but its take on the empowerment of women suffers from well-intended over-kill. Meg Frantano's mid-life crisis is triggered by witnessing a cheating husband in the book's very funny and touching opening scene. The rest of the story does not deliver on its early promise and the humour seems to fade as the somewhat thinly-plotted story continues. A bevy of larger-than-life (and of course beautiful) female friends support and inspire Meg on her journey towards self-discovery. As a woman of a "certain age", I can certainly relate to Meg's experiences and I admire the bonds of female friendships.However, I think what irritated me most was the unrealistic ease in which Meg's life issues were resolved. I can appreciate a positive spin on things, but come on - an inherited ocean cottage in Mexico, a complete resolution with all family members and enough cash to ease any life change? And that's only part of the package! Lots of "perfects" and "beautifuls" pepper these pages. The author's idealism gets in the way of realism. What about the larger population of women who simply can't afford to be "empowered"? 15 of 18 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing,
By Liz in VT "reader of many books" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Dancing Naked at the Edge of Dawn (Paperback)
I thoroughly enjoyed "The Elegant Gathering of White Snows" by Kris Radish and was looking forward to another great read with this book. I have seldom been so disappointed in a story.I loved the beginning of "Dancing Naked at the Edge of Dawn"...but after the first chapter, the book just fizzles out. The writing is overly flowery and the conversations between the characters are unrealistic. I'm a believer in many things new age, karma, positive thinking, etc. but the overblown prose in this story and simplistic resolutions to each and every problem facing our heroine, Meg, were enough to make me throw up my hands several times in frustration. Meg serves her husband with divorce papers and they end up having a fabulous dinner together reliving the positive aspects of their failed relationship...and one-upping eachother with praise for the other.....uh huh. Her Mom has to have a lump checked out...but her yoga and positive thinking help to make it non-cancerous. Meg goes to Mexico as her Aunt had wished and finds the love of her life, a perfect seaside cottage that she now owns and peace. The list of unrealistic outcomes is endless. I did keep plugging along trying to enjoy the story...but the writing kept getting in my way of the plot and the simplistic resolutions just became too much to bear. Try "The Elegant Gathering of White Snows" instead. |
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