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Never Change
 
 

Never Change (Hardcover)

de Elizabeth Berg (Author)
4.3étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (90 évaluations de client)

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From Amazon.com

Elizabeth Berg has a single great gift as a novelist. She creates heroines who are stuck and unhappy, yet deeply sympathetic. This may seem like an easy trick to pull off, but it's not. Think about it: usually when a character is mired in a problem--especially a problem stemming from her own reluctance to change, or fear of commitment, or lack of identity--the reader is ready within a few dozen pages to shout, "Pull yourself together!" and set the book aside. In contrast, Berg's characters seem like enjoyable challenges: problems with actual solutions.

In Never Change, Berg uses her gift to great advantage. Middle-aged Myra Lipinsky describes herself as "the one who sat on a folding chair out in the hall with a cigar box on my lap selling tickets to the prom, but never going." And despite a flourishing career as a visiting nurse, she feels as much an also-ran as ever. As the novel begins, in fact, high school seems to be rearing its ugly head again: Chip Reardon, the heartthrob of Myra's youth, has returned to town to live with his parents. Chip is dying from a brain tumor, and Myra becomes his nurse. Berg is not the kind of writer to lay bare the unsettling power dynamics of such a situation. Instead, Chip and Myra become friends and, well, learn how to love each other. It's a testament to the author's strong sense of character that we actually believe--and what's more, care about--Myra's emergence from her emotional cocoon. And the book is full of nice details, like this snapshot of children being read to at a library, "rising up on their knees to see the pictures, resting their hands unselfconsciously on those ahead of them so that they would not lose their balance." Such careful observations, recounted in Myra's voice, make us believe that she is a character worth knowing, and worth saving. --Claire Dederer



From Publishers Weekly

Oprah author Berg (her Open House was a 2000 Book Club selection) turns in another sweet, unprepossessing and reassuringly predictable novel whose characters experience loneliness, loss and healing. "Odd-shaped," and with an "unfortunate" face, Myra Lipinski has been lonely all her life; she trained as a nurse "because I knew it would be a way for people to love me." Now 51, she lives alone with her dog and works as a visiting nurse in Boston, caring for an array of eccentrics that includes the feuding Schwartz couple, the feisty DeWitt Washington and the anxious teenage mother Grace. Resigned to spinsterhood, Myra is secretly thrilled when her agency assigns her to care for a former crush, Chip Reardon, who has returned to his parents' home with end-stage brain cancer. In high school, Chip was a golden boy, athletic and clever, out of ugly duckling Myra's league. Now, though, he and Myra strike up a friendship based on their mutual loneliness and on Chip's resistance to his parents, who want him to pursue aggressive treatment for his cancer. Chip prefers to die peacefully, a decision that only Myra seems to understand. Chip and Myra become inseparable: he tags along on her patient visits and eventually moves into her house, where their budding friendship takes a romantic turn. On the brink of death, Chip helps Myra to realize that her isolation is as much self-induced as fated; throughout their lives, both he and Myra have shied away from human closeness. In an inspiring, well-deserved denouement, Chip's inevitable death forces Myra to embrace the world in all its bittersweet complexity. Berg's fans will be grateful for the same gift: a novel that serves as a gentle, if unambitious, reminder to "only connect." 10-city author tour.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


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L'avis des consommateurs

90 évaluations
5 étoiles:
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4 étoiles:
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4.3étoiles sur 5 (90 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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Commentaires client les plus utiles

 
5.0étoiles sur 5 Elizabeth Berg Rules!!!, Avril 22 2004
Par Un client
Anyone who says in any way that Elizabeth Berg doesn't know what she's doing, or should write better, ought to get their head examined. ..Elizabeth Berg is the best fiction writer that I've ever read. She is brilliant. I only wish that I could come close to writing like her. She has a rare gift. I think her books, all of them are the most amazing things ever! I am a reading addict, and I get so excited every time Elizabeth releases another book. ......She's awesome , and I think she's aware of that fact by now...Keep writing Liz, we love you...
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Filled With Rare Beauty, Avril 16 2004
This review is from: Never Change (Paperback)
Myra Lipinski is 51 and single. She's plain, introverted, and her one great passion is her job as a nurse. Although she's not exactly discontent, Myra has resigned herself the fact that the rest of her life will be fairly uneventful. Yet then her former high school crush comes back into her life-the handsome, impossibly accomplished Chip Reardon. But Chip is no longer the perfect specimen he was. He is dying from a brain tumor, and Myra becomes his nurse. Then, their relationship deepens and they are both forced to confront horrifying, enormous, and unbelievably profound ideas about dying, death, the meaning of life, and falling in love.

Okay, you can stop rolling your eyes now! Admittedly, in the hands of a lesser author, "Never Change" would become a weepy, soap-operaish mess. Elizabeth Berg, on the other hand, has the intelligence, piericingly superb writing skills, and keen sense of character necessary to pull off such a tough subject.

What really makes "Never Change" such an unforgettable and deeply enjoyable read is Myra. From the the first chapter in which Berg effortlessly and precisely captures Myra's remembrance of longing to go her high school prom, she makes her character shine. And it's not that Myra shines because she is unique or unusually intelligent or accomplished-she is a memorable character because she is NONE of those things. Instead, throughout "Never Change" Myra's longings, wishes, thoughts, and perspectives resonate because of the deep truth that lurks behind their normalcy.

I also loved this novel because it never pretended to have all of the answers about dying. It showed the horribly grotesque and hideously frightening side of being terminally ill and brought up an endless of number of hard questions about the issue. Indeed, "Never Change" even ends with a somewhat nebulous stance on how a life should be lived after it has been touched by another's death. But this seeming wishy-washyness and lack of clear-cut opinions about death is genius. It is truly realistic, since who really know what death is like? Also, by allowing her characters (mainly Myra) to ponder aspects of death and dying without coming up with many answers, Berg takes her readers on a thoughtful "journey" and allows them to perhaps make up their own mind on the issues.

Finally, I relished the secondary characters included in the book. Since Myra is a traveling nurse who visits patients in their home, she comes into contact with an eclectic spectrum of humanity. All of these many patients-from a wounded drug dealer to a lonely yet intelligent elderly woman in a retirement facility-add new angles of insight and enjoyment to the story and are cleverly created to influence Myra in unique and "fun to read" ways.

Yes, it could have been a horrible book. And yes, the idea of Myra falling in love, over 35 years after last seeing him, with her dying high school crush sounds like a bit too much to swallow. But with her lovely characters, compassionate prose, and satisfyingly deft writing, Elizabeth Berg makes it so you wouldn't want to change a thing about this book.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 This was my first Berg book..., Fév 15 2004
...and it won't be my last. It was funny, quirky, sad, and tragic all at the same time. I would start crying on one page and by the next I was laughing again. Berg has become one of my all time favorite authors.
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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 A TOUCHING STORY
Women will weep; women will love it. Elizabeth Berg's novel centers around a middle aged woman with an "unfortunate" face. Read more
Publié le Fév 11 2004 par Gail Cooke

5.0étoiles sur 5 So many levels...
I found it fascinating to read all the reviews of this book, and its beautiful story. The cynics and the literal-minded disliked it... Read more
Publié le Déc 2 2003

1.0étoiles sur 5 poor followup to other wonderful book by author
This book was a poor, sappy, cheap dime store novel version of the usual wondors Elizabeth Burg writes. Read more
Publié le Nov. 16 2003

4.0étoiles sur 5 Change is a Good Thing!
I love Berg, because she can take a bore like Myra Lipinsky and make her interesting. She can take a homely, unpopular, loner and create a world where she can become... Read more
Publié le Sep 2 2003 par siammuse

5.0étoiles sur 5 I'm singing Elizabeth Berg's praises!
The reason I love Elizabeth Berg is because she has that unique talent for taking a plot that sounds cliché, and pulling the truth out of it, line by line, till my preconceived... Read more
Publié le Sep 1 2003 par valgal00

5.0étoiles sur 5 Beyond the High School Yearbook
This is an engaging, touching and lovingly-written novel that draws us into a circle of real people facing real (and in some cases, devastating) problems. Read more
Publié le Juil 17 2003 par linda ann olson

4.0étoiles sur 5 The classic yearbook phrase  never change
Myra is 51 years old has never married and never been in love. Unless being in love with nursing counts. Read more
Publié le Mars 17 2003 par Shannon Grant

4.0étoiles sur 5 A Half-Full Glass
Myra Lipinski was a largely unloved child of immigrant parents, whose only comfort or solace growing up was her inner self. Read more
Publié le Mars 12 2003 par W. Carol

4.0étoiles sur 5 Great Book!! You won't be able to stop reading it!!
This was a wonderful book! I am a new fan of Elizabeth Berg and have read five of her books now. This is one of the best ones. Read more
Publié le Fév 12 2003 par Jennifer Lynn Seger

5.0étoiles sur 5 Perfect!
I get goosebumps just thinking about this book. First, I should say that I'm a great fan of Elizabeth Berg, but this, to me, is her best book by miles. Read more
Publié le Fév 6 2003 par Margaret M. Bell

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