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Book Reviews of Hidden Wives

Hidden Wives
Hidden Wives
Author: Claire Avery
ISBN-13: 9780765363749
ISBN-10: 0765363747
Publication Date: 8/30/2011
Pages: 384
Rating:
  • Currently 4.6/5 Stars.
 4

4.6 stars, based on 4 ratings
Publisher: Forge Books
Book Type: Mass Market Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

10 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

Jennmarie68 avatar reviewed Hidden Wives on + 217 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
A review copy of this title was provided by the author.

I absolutely LOVED this book. It was such a heart-wrenching story. From the very beginning I was wishing for those girls to get out of there.

Rachel and Sara were great characters. Although Rachel was a bit dense, or I guess I should say brainwashed, she was such a compelling character. Sara, right from the word go showed so much intelligence. Her want to get away, but not leave her sister behind really made me heart ache for her.

The writing was beautiful, not in a poetic kind of way, but in that it was so simple, yet so compelling. Even though what happens in the story is hard to read I didn't want to put it down. There's a certain finesse to this book that makes it hard to put down (even when you have homework or sleep to get to).

The subject matter was difficult to read, but I think it's something that needed to be written. I think TV has sensationalized the polygamist lifestyle, and there's a much darker side that doesn't really come through in these shows. The abuse, incest, and brainwashing that occurred in this book was disgusting, for lack of a better term. I know that not all polygamists and compounds condone or practice this kind of behavior, but I'm sure that there are some (of both) that do, and that is a scary thought.

Such a compelling and heart-wrenching tale. I was hooked right from the beginning!
georgiagymdog avatar reviewed Hidden Wives on
Helpful Score: 1
This book held my interest because of the setting, but the writing is weak and the plot is forced.
babyjulie avatar reviewed Hidden Wives on + 336 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Nothing I can write here will do this book justice. I wish I was as talented with my words as the authors because maybe then there would be a chance for me to get my opinion through to the people who will see this.
I can't gush about Hidden Wives enough. I knew, before reading this, that I would love it. I had that feeling (hopefully you've had it also for a book and know what I mean!) after only seeing the cover and knowing the title. That's a great, great, super great feeling. Even though I knew I'd love Hidden Wives I was still shocked when I opened to the first page. I hadn't though about how much I'd love it - the very first sentence and I fell in love deeper.
I'm sure there will be people who don't like this book - there always are and not every book is for everyone - but I think those people will be few and far betwee. I'm not only amazed that this is the first novel from Claire Avery but also at the talent that poured out.
It's a rare, rare book that evokes such emotion. I've read much more non-fiction in my life than fiction and most of the non hasn't forced such feeling out of me.
There was a constant fight going on in my head because a part of me kept my eyes skipping ahead - I just had to know. Another part was making myself move as slow as possible so I could savor every sentence. One could say that I read this twice already because I reread every paragraph - and only because they were all so beautiful.
I have no doubt that I'll reread this many times over the years. I haven't reread a book, even from an all-time favorite author, in...... well, almost forever.
Even if the subject of polygamy doesn't interest you I would recommend not passing by this easily. Whether you're into non-fiction, fiction, whatever, this will probably touch you like you never imagined.
I felt such fear so many times and such joy so many others. I wanted to reach in the book and help Sara and Rachel and Irvin.
Irvin brings me to another subject. Race is a very sensitive subject with me. I don't like all the stereotypes and distinctions found everywhere. I don't like anything like that - in my eyes we're all the same and everyone should be treated and viewed the same. Most books have a hard time accomplishing this. A very hard time. Taking into account that Sara and Rachel grew up in a polygamist family and the problems with race they had to face, that part of the book could have easily went downhill. It was the opposite. I don't think I could name one other book I have ever, in my entire life, read that handles the subject so beautifully. There was nothing I would have wished differently and being that I'm so conscious of the subject that really says a lot.
I could go on forever about Hidden Wives. I had a ton of books piled up waiting for me and I bypassed them all because of the feeling I had about this book and I didn't let myself down. Or, I should say, Claire Avery didn't let me down.
I can only hope and pray that another book is in the works right now - I'll be in line to buy it the exact day it's released.
Please, do not pass this book up because you think it's only for a certain type of reader - exactly the opposite is true. This book is for so many people. You'll be missing out tremendously.
Please also take this review and times it by 1,000 because like I said above, my words cannot do justice to my feelings.
reviewed Hidden Wives on
Helpful Score: 1
This book is unimpressive - nothing but one cliche and obvious, strained plot twist after another. Certainly not literature but not gripping or well-crafted enough to qualify as a good disposable read. Not everyone is a writer, and these people certainly have no gift for language beyond constructing basic sentences. I would bet this book sold because of the salacious interest in Short Creek/Jeffs/Big Love, not because of independent literary merit.
reviewed Hidden Wives on + 379 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Hidden Wives is not an easy story to read because it deals with all-too-real abuse. It is a chilling novel about a fundamentalist cult where pedophiles, abusers and bigamists give themselves license to commit heinous crimes against women and children with sanction from God and absolute impunity.

Sarah and Rachel are two half-sisters with multiple mothers, siblings and a monster in the guise of their father. Education is not valued unless it is the teaching of fundamentalist Mormon doctrine, as directed by the "Prophet" Silver. Sarah, promised as a wife to her uncle by "Prophet" Silver, craves books and realizes that what they've learned and lived is radically wrong. Rachel merely wants to follow the dictates of the church despite overwhelming evidence that evil thrives within her community.

Unlike another reviewer, I couldn't read this book in one sitting. I had to process what was happening within the pages with breaks of my "normal" world because the knowledge that these cults really do exist is heart rending.

The debut novel is well written, and thoroughly researched. It is difficult to know that there are women who are forced to endure lives like those of the sister-wives in this book. It would be reassuring to know that actual polygamists receive the justice shown at the conclusion of this book to Abraham.

I will follow the writing career of Claire Avery with interest. I am certain that her next novel will also provide thought-provoking themes, which is what good novels do.
beebs avatar reviewed Hidden Wives on
I found myself drawn to this story. It was a story both disturbing and hopeless, but finally hope wins out. For some.

While this is a fictional story, it appeared to be loosely based on the same polygamist community that Warren Jeffs was (or still is?) the leader of.

It's hard to imagine that women and girls are willing participants in such a community, but reports from those who have left bear out much of what is written here.

A few "scenes" are on the unbelievable side, and yet. . .one can begin to imagine how a society that is cloaked in secrecy is able to maintain such a perverse and destructive worldview among its members.
AllieFWilliam avatar reviewed Hidden Wives on + 97 more book reviews
One of the most fascinating books I have ever read. Characters so real I tried looking them up on the computer to see what they are doing now and found out it was fiction.
Two devoted sisters escape the horrors of being a child bride to an old man. They eventually find love and acceptance in California with a woman who takes them in. She helps them start over and move past their horrible childhood.
sfc95 avatar reviewed Hidden Wives on + 686 more book reviews
Amazing! This is a can't put down read. I absolutely loved it, The material is graphic and you find yourself rooting for characters throughout the book, but it is great.
flyinggems avatar reviewed Hidden Wives on + 451 more book reviews
Sara and Rachel are two sisters living in a polygamy world. They have now reached the age to become wives. Rachel embraces the religion and all their beliefs while Sara questions some of the rules. When the rules start to change to fit what their father wants, Rachel starts to question giving Sara her chance to pull them both away from this lifestyle.

The book takes you to a brief point in the sisters lives and shows you the circumstances leading up to their departure and the consequences of their actions.

The book is a work of fiction but opens a window into this lifestyle and questions it. It was not an intense page turner but I did finish the book in a couple of days.
reviewed Hidden Wives on + 63 more book reviews
At times I felt like I was reading from a newspaper instead of a Novel, but the material is an accurate depiction of some of the more opressed groups who practice pologamy.

This novel tells a story on several levels - how someone can be pulled into a cult in the name of God, and how, when in, becomes so brainwashed that they loose site of what is right and wrong. After joining the "Blood of the Lamb" community, a mother has been so brainwahed that she is willing to hand over her daughters to older and related men because their leader"had a revelation"

One daughter, who is beautiful, is wanted by most of the men in the compond, but falls in love with a young man she is forbidded to marry. The story was not as compelling as I had hoped, but was a "good" book.