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The Lovely Bones: Deluxe Edition
 
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The Lovely Bones: Deluxe Edition (Paperback)

de Alice Sebold (Author)
3.8étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (2,078 évaluations de client)
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  • Cet article : The Lovely Bones: Deluxe Edition de Alice Sebold

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Descriptions du produit

From Amazon.co.uk

On her way home from school on a snowy December day, 14-year-old Susie Salmon is lured into a cornfield and brutally raped and murdered, the latest victim of a serial killer. The Lovely Bones, Alice Sebold's haunting and heartbreaking debut novel, unfolds from heaven, where "life is a perpetual yesterday" and where Susie narrates and keeps watch over her grieving family and friends, as well as her brazen killer and the sad detective working on her case.

As Sebold fashions it, everyone has his or her own version of heaven. Susie's resembles the athletic fields and landscape of a suburban high school: a heaven of her "simplest dreams", where "there were no teachers... We never had to go inside except for art class... The boys did not pinch our backsides or tell us we smelled; our textbooks were Seventeen and Glamour and Vogue".

The Lovely Bones works as an odd yet affecting coming-of-age story. Susie struggles to accept her death while still clinging to the lost world of the living, following her family's dramas over the years. Her family disintegrates in their grief: her father becomes determined to find her killer, her mother withdraws, her little brother Buckley attempts to make sense of the new hole in his family and her younger sister Lindsey moves through the milestone events of her teenage and young adult years with Susie riding spiritual shotgun. Random acts and missed opportunities run throughout the book--Susie recalls her sole kiss with a boy on earth as "like an accident--a beautiful gasoline rainbow".

Though sentimental at times, The Lovely Bones is a moving exploration of loss and mourning that ultimately puts its faith in the living and that is made even more powerful by a cast of convincing characters. Sebold orchestrates a big finish and though things tend to wrap up a little too well for everyone in the end, one can only imagine (or hope) that heaven is indeed a place filled with such happy endings. --Brad Thomas Parsons, Amazon.com This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Books in Canada

In the fall of 1999, when the film The Sixth Sense was so suddenly and hugely successful, National Post columnist Len Blum, in one of his weekly columns, sought to grasp the movie’s remarkable word of mouth reputation. While thinking that it obviously connected with our innate sense of unworthiness and fear of failure, he felt its major magic was to “tap into our desire to commune with loved ones who have died, to tell them we love them, to resolve things left unresolved.” One suspects the wild success of Alice Sebold’s The Lovely Bones mines the same cavern of unrequited longing in our oh-so-secular and cynical culture. In the midst of our high tech savvy and soft core luxuries we still seem to crave a design, a somewhat less divine sort of plan than the one advanced by fanatics but somewhat more spiritual than the usual, devoid-of-mystery allowed for by the debunking sciences.
The latest reports claim a million copies in print: the three library systems I checked each listed well over a hundred holds. Copies of Alice Sebold’s first book, 1999’s memoir Lucky cannot be had for love nor money. As one narrative has a heroine mauled and raped and the other one mauled, raped, murdered and dismembered, I sensed a connection, if not, indeed, an angle, and finally tracked down an excerpt on the web. Despite having read several “rape and recovery” memoirs when the genre first blossomed some years back, I was quite unprepared for the brutal frankness of the author’s trauma recreated. Its raw and unapologetic victim-centred account reminded me uncomfortably of the kind of grim violence fetishised by certain male novelists who seem to know their market all too well, and it contrasted remarkably with the soft focus storytelling of Lovely Bones. As Sebold tells it, in an interview on that same web site, she wrote chunks of both works almost simultaneously: it’s almost as if in reenacting the angry drama of virgin sacrifice along with the sanctified ascent of the soon-to-be beatified she was trying to have her cake and eat it.

Save for her pleasant, but regularly interrupted, residence at some entry level purgatory set aside for those victims of violent crime disinclined to bend themselves to vengeance but still besotted with the unrequited desires of youth, some of which power her many seemingly instantaneous trips back to family, school and neighbourhood, little Susie Salmon is merely the latest in a long line of ghostly protagonists, going back farther than Henry James’ Quint in Turn Of The Screw and proceeding down through the decades through Julian Barnes’s sublimely enigmatic A History Of The World In Ten And A Half Chapters, to Will Self’s darkly sardonic How The Dead Live and Rebecca Goldstein’s recent Properties Of Light, where romantic obsession is leavened with the yeast of quantum physics and the water of tantric practice to persuade the reader that poeticising the flow of consciousness is the stuff of life itself.
A more conventional vision of afterlife seems to motivate Ms. Sebold in her delineation of a teenager’s eternity, a type that could much more easily be translated into film, which I strongly suspect is the destiny of Those Lovely Bones: an honourable fate for a novel which leaves much to be desired in the opinion of this reviewer. For despite its current reputation as some kind of afterlife revelation, the work shoulders its tragic burdens with a descriptive style more satisfying than challenging, and indulges all too often in soap opera sentimentalising, and creakily predictable plot mechanisms dragged into play by an author one suspects is attempting to save the postmodern novel from the pointless pirouettes of its own cleverness by grafting on snatches of spiritualistic truisms. And yet I must say, after decades of hapless authors skulking about the detritus of post modernism, believing all they have inherited about the death of god and the resultant absense of omniscience, it is quite refreshing to read one who glides about her plot with the defiant glee of a minor deity unapologetically imposing a grand design.
Through the filtered lens of the dead girl’s perceptions, we watch as her family gradually disinters itself from the shallow womb of its innocence, although whether its particular devastation is ultimately any worse than the average traverse through the dark valleys of divorce, abuse and terminal illness is debatable. As the action takes place in small town USA in the early seventies, apt comparisons might have been drawn with families losing sons in Vietnam and the narrative thus invigorated, but Sebold generally opts for the more comforting icons of nostalgia.
What is relatively unique in her treatment of societal dysfunction is perspective: for although Susie Salmon worries about her family more like a fretful and fastidious auntie than an adolescent immersed in the turbulence of self-obsession, Sebold does permit us glimpses of how the dead can moulder in purgatories of their own choosing, ignore the advice of wise guides, and sweep earthward in the blink of a thought, to observe but rarely interact, buzzing multiple locations with the immaculate dexterity of a photon.
And like every wronged ghost in the annals of psychical research she craves the righting of the historical record, and whether it takes two or two hundred years seems not to matter. Her neighbour-assailant, assiduously carved from the usual deprived childhood cliches, moves untroubled through a myth of America, managing his homicidal tend encies with the kind of sociopathic efficiency with which we have already been numbed, and when he meets his just desserts, Sebold, like the smug omniscient narrators of old, manages his dispatch with a shaft of poetic justice others might shrivel at, and in place of the selfless poise that the pursuit of empathy might provide, we are handed the done deed—a bad boy gets his comeuppance.
In 1641, Henry Fielding, as part of his sharp satire A Journey From This World To The Next, much in the manner of his day, has one of his characters, riding in the post-mortem coach to Elysium, ask another why “he was not diverting himself by walking up and down and playing some merry tricks” with his murderer. Alice Sebold, despite an earnestness which dulls the potential for a more sustained burst of illumination, has an intriguing answer.
Gordon Phinn (Books in Canada) --Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.

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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

The Lovely Bones: Deluxe Edition
89% buy the item featured on this page:
The Lovely Bones: Deluxe Edition 3.8étoiles sur 5 (2,078)
CDN$ 13.86
Push: A Novel
3% buy
Push: A Novel 4.3étoiles sur 5 (163)
CDN$ 8.00
Dear John
3% buy
Dear John 4.2étoiles sur 5 (5)
CDN$ 5.00
The Glass Castle: A Memoir
2% buy
The Glass Castle: A Memoir 4.7étoiles sur 5 (90)
CDN$ 8.25

 

L'avis des consommateurs

2,078 évaluations
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 (459)
3 étoiles:
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Évaluation du client type
3.8étoiles sur 5 (2,078 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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Commentaires client les plus utiles

 
9 internautes sur 10 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
3.0étoiles sur 5 ambitious but not entirely successful, Nov. 1 2006
Par Serendipity (Toronto) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
I would never have read this if it weren't for my bookclub. Having avoided it since it came out, I had very low expectations and so was surprised to be engrossed in the story - untill, about half-way through, it seemed to lose the plot and meandered around aimlessly, getting repetitive as it tried to wring emotion out of its characters, and me.

Susie Salmon is dead. She begins her story by describing how she is murdered, and her family's reaction. From her place in heaven, she can watch anyone she wants to, but apart from "touching" Ruth, a fellow 14-year-old student at her school, on her way out, she can't make her presence felt. Ruth becomes a little obsessed with Susie, and starts to see and feel dead people, keeping a record of them in her diary. Susie's mum uses her daughter's death as a trigger to leave her family and try to recapture her youth. She is constantly described as a woman who never wanted to be a mother. Susie's dad takes her death particularly bad, and focuses on his two other children, Lindsey and Buckley.

Susie watches from heaven as her family grows older, watches as Lindsey goes from first kiss to accepting a marriage proposal, watches her murderer, Mr Harvey, a serial killer who is [spoiler alert!] never caught, and, at the end of the book, possesses Ruth's body so she can lose her viginity to the only boy she ever kissed.

The Lovely Bones is fairly ambitious, and although it manages to keep from slipping into sentimental indulgence, it also lacks drive, and misses many opportunities to really delve into some interesting and important issues. Some devices were a bit cheesy, and seemed like avoidance. I guess I, like most people, would have been more satisfied if Mr Harvey had been caught, but that's not necessarily realistic either. The main reason why I struggled to finish it and why I give it only 3 stars is that the second half has nowhere to go, it loses its immediacy as the years go by and people start moving on, letting go of Susie, whose body was never found either. The characters started to annoy me - I wanted to be sympathetic, even of the mother, who, in a way, has the hardest time of all, but they began to get cliched.

That said, there are some nice descriptions, Susie's voice is apt, there's a great sense of time (she's killed in the 70s) without being too obvious, and even if you only read the first half, it's well written and gripping before it becomes tedious.
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5 internautes sur 5 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
5.0étoiles sur 5 This definitely goes on my favourites list!, Fév 20 2009
This review is from: The Lovely Bones (Paperback)
What a concept! The author wrote in a voice that no book I have read before has been written in. This book was thourougly compelling and a real page turner. It reads as a mystery/thriller in parts but above all you really get to know a family and how they interact and connect and especially how they cope in the face of absolute unimaginable tragedy. I highly recommend this book and I will be loaning my copy out to everyone I know. One suggestion though...have a kleenex box handy.
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4 internautes sur 4 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
4.0étoiles sur 5 Unique Concept = Very Interesting Book, Juil 27 2008
Par MacFly (Regina, Saskatchewan) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: The Lovely Bones (Hardcover)
The Lovely Bones is a fascinating book told from a most unusual perspective. The narrator is a young girl named Susie who, as the book begins, has already been murdered and is looking down on her family and friends. Through her eyes, we learn the story of her death and watch her family and friends come to grip with her loss. We are also able to watch her murderer, as he is known to Susie, which adds an interesting twist to the novel. Alice Sebold is able to take a very unique premise for a book and develop it into a truly interesting book. This novel kept my attention throughout and my thoughts kept returning to it between readings. I am quite keen to check out more books by this author.
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Commentaires client les plus récents

2.0étoiles sur 5 An overall disappointment
I just finished reading the book, going into it with very high hopes -- and have to say, I was greatly disappointed. Read more
Publié il y a 25 jours par Liana

5.0étoiles sur 5 awesome!
The journey of a family and friends following the murder of a young girl - written from the perspective of the girl watching them from heaven. Read more
Publié il y a 2 mois par Stephani Lapierre

4.0étoiles sur 5 Pretty good but not great
This book is pretty good. It paints a nice picture, it moves a long at a nice pace. Unfortunately, it's not very satisfying. Read more
Publié il y a 2 mois par John Kong

2.0étoiles sur 5 Disappointed
I thought it would be a great story about a young girls view from heaven. I hated how the story began with a girl girl being raped and killed, put me off right away... Read more
Publié il y a 4 mois par Riann M. Willoughby

1.0étoiles sur 5 Can't finish the book...
Wonder about this book for years as the reviews are so good. I felt I HAVE to read it, and as usual a must read book often turned to "never finish" book. Read more
Publié il y a 5 mois par Bella

5.0étoiles sur 5 Loved it!
This book is a page turner! I love how it was narrated from heaven!
[...]
Publié il y a 7 mois par Carrie A. Paxson

5.0étoiles sur 5 Courtesy of Teens Read Too
THE LOVELY BONES will haunt you. This book tells the story of the most horrific thing a family could ever endure, the murder of a loved one, a child. Read more
Publié il y a 19 mois par TeensReadToo.com

5.0étoiles sur 5 Excellent
I really enjoyed this book. The beginning captures your attention and keeps it through to the end. You won't be disappointed.
Publié il y a 20 mois par Picky Reader

4.0étoiles sur 5 4.5 Original and Refreshing!
Susie Salmon is a 14-year-old dead girl looks down from heaven and tells us about her murder and her observations about her family. Read more
Publié il y a 23 mois par Teddy

5.0étoiles sur 5 Only 1 Word to Describe the book, OUTSTANDING!!!
Despite having a chemistry midterm hanging over my head I finished this book within a day. While reading the book I was actually dreading that it will come to an end and still I... Read more
Publié le Fév 7 2008 par Fariha Imami

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