6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
a lovely lyrical wander, May 5 2008
By Kris Millering - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Quakeland (Hardcover)
Lyrical and dreamlike, Quakeland follows the intertwined stories of a group of women, telling the story of another woman who was somehow central to all of their lives--Grace. This is Grace's story, though the events of the book more revolve around her than are about her. She is the missing piece at the story's heart, the personal tsunami that echoes the real tsunami that provides the starting point for the book.
I love Block's dream-naif prose, though I did have trouble connecting with Katrina and understanding why she was doing the things she was. I found the later narrators--the unnamed woman and Angeli--to be much more comprehensible, if only because they were watching the drama from the outside instead of directly living the story.
Overall, well worth picking up!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
FLB is growing up in her themes and into her style, Oct 30 2008
By Satia Renee "Satia Renee" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Quakeland (Hardcover)
Quakeland by Francesca Lia Block is another example of how Block has grown creatively and how her characters have matured along with her story's themes. Here she returns to the interwoven stories that she did so beautifully in Echo. But this is not a young adult novel and this is as close as it gets to being a disappointment.
Block's young adult novels, with their beautiful imagery, lyrical language, and above all how she touches on the most painful experiences with a delicacy that makes even the most nightmarish realities something that can not only be survived but can be survived with grace. There is a promise at the end of her young adult novels that is not present in Quakeland. Perhaps this is more honest. Perhaps with maturity comes the need to just accept that pain is inevitable.
And yet, there is a sense of the human potential to evolve beyond the present reality (a promise hinted at by the perfect and marvelous illustration on the cover). This book is infused with the horrors of terrorist attacks, floods, tsunamis, and the threat of earthquakes. In the pages there is healing, a sort of homeopathic catharsis of words. I wanted to cry most of the time as I was reading. The pain was too familiar.
Needless to say, I will return to this book and reread it. I will hold it close as I read the words and sigh. Maybe I will not want to cry. Maybe I will want to cry so much more that I will not be able to stop myself. And no maybe about it, I look forward to Block's next book.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of her most personal works, Jun 13 2008
By Abby Denson "Abbycomix" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Quakeland (Hardcover)
As a long-time Francesca Lia Block fan I'm pleased by how Quakeland contains the themes I've come to love so well, but is also a bit darker and has more realistic tones than her other works. Parts of it seem almost autobiographical (though I have no idea if any of it is based in reality) and that made it even more fascinating. I couldn't put it down!