The Green Hour
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Narrated by:
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Celeste Lawson
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By:
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Frederic Tuten
The Green Hour is Tuten's richest, most romantic work to date, a treasure from one of our most original contemporary novelists.
©2002 Frederic Tuten (P)2003 Blackstone AudiobooksListeners also enjoyed...
Critic reviews
"Lawson's performance is earnest and touching." (AudioFile)
"Cleanly reasoned, pellucidly phrased, in some respects this novel is as 'bloodless and cerebral' as Poussin's paintings, and yet as infused with emotion as Goya's. Yet its portrait of a modern woman's dilemma is, in the end, genuinely moving." (Publisher's Weekly)
"Cosmopolitan, erotic, beautifully melancholy, and suspenseful." (Booklist)
Poetic writing: 5 Narrative: 2
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I have to agree with Everett that it seemed odd that Dominique would keep returning to Rex. What seemed even more odd, though, was that every other man in the novel desired Dominique, she treated them like dirt, and I seriously could see no reason why they would keep coming back to a woman so emotionally unavailable. Her pretentiousness and her intellectualism and her frigidity (not in bed, oh no-- we get to hear about her sexual escapades in the most distant, dry manner possible) kept me wondering what anyone could see in her.
Plus, the novel is so heavily in Dominique's head, with inner monologue (which reads like the journal of an art history grad student with delusions of intellectual importance), there is no story to hang onto. It's hard to tell when something is even happening, and I seriously couldn't get excited even when something did.
If you are the kind of person who adores inner monologue rambling of a self-important icicle, you'll enjoy this. But it was definitely not for anyone who actually wants to listen to good storytelling.
Pretentious, rambling, inner-monologue, no story!
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