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Book Reviews of Our Lady of the Forest

Our Lady of the Forest
Our Lady of the Forest
Author: David Guterson
ISBN-13: 9781400077847
ISBN-10: 1400077842
Pages: 323
Rating:
  • Currently 2.8/5 Stars.
 4

2.8 stars, based on 4 ratings
Publisher: Vantage
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

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

reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 145 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
I'm still drawn to those stories about religious dysfunction and people who have "callings" or visions. This is one of the better done stories. I came to like all of the characters involved and Guterson pulls you in as he did with Snow Falling on the Cedars.
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 149 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Completely original and unique story of a yound woman who believes she is being visited by the Virgin Mary in visions. She attracts a following and problems arise. It was completely engrossing.
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 9 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
I really liked it, very interesting story of religious fanaticism and the dehumanization of it. If you liked Snow Falling on Cedars you will like this.
glowbuggreen avatar reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 13 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Plot of this book was so unlike anything else I've ever read. Its a good story and one that will stick with you after you read it...maybe because the subject matter is a little disturbing!
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 68 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I usually finish stories, however, this was so plodding and boring, I couldn't.
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 63 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I really enjoyed this book, because it is a story about finding faith in the most unexpected places. It is the story of Ann a non-believer who becomes the chosen one in a small logging village and brings a community back to their roots of faith.
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 38 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Just could not get into this book
SanJoseCa avatar reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 328 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A story of a runaway teen, who claims to have seen the Virgin Mary. AS her visions stimulate a tourism boom in a depressed town, they also draw the attention of the media and the Catholic Church. This is a beautifully written novel,--giving us a vivid look at the difficulty of being religious in a postmodern society.
TarynC avatar reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 213 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Very bizarre book, my mom loved it and encouraged me to read it. I found most of the characters unlikeable and the story depressing. He is a good writer and if you are in the "right mood" maybe you will enjoy the book.
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 30 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I really didn't enjoy this book.
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 40 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
a very amazing story with interesting characters & an unexpected ending.
leaves the reader to make their own conclusion
sumrwind avatar reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 135 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Our Lady of the forest....it took me a while to finally finish this book. I will remember the characters for the humanity in each one of them, but I'm just not too sure if this is a good book. There were times, where I just wanted to stop reading, yet it kept me wanting to know how it ends too. Some of it was uncomfortable, some of it was funny, strange and informative on the subject of believing the sightings of MOther Mary. This is my first book by this author, David Guterson, who also wrote "snow falling on cedars" I might even try that book.
txbeck avatar reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 64 more book reviews
Unabridged, 12 hours
read by Blair Brown
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 15 more book reviews
I really did not care much for the book. I'll stick to my Amish Fiction
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 10 more book reviews
Good use of descriptive language and truly enjoyed narrator. Story examines how others project their needs or desires on events so that they can interpret these events in particular ways. Story was good but I didn't identify with any characters.
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 8 more book reviews
enjoyed this well written story
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 77 more book reviews
A look at how much people today need to find something to bolster their faith. Lovely, sensitve language; a delight to the senses and something to behold for anyone who loves the written word.
justreadingabook avatar reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 1726 more book reviews
This was a thought provoking book. The writing was wonderful, very descriptive without over doing it. Beautiful imagery and the storyline is intriguing and puts you right into it. A really great read.
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 23 more book reviews
Also wrote "Snow Falling on Cedars". "An intense and affecting jouney of faith, miracle and humanity." -- The Denver Post.
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 404 more book reviews
From David Guterson
bestselling author of Snow Falling on Cedars
comes this emotionally charged, provocative novel about what happens when a fifteen-year-old girl becomes an instrument of divine grace.
reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 6 more book reviews
I took offense of the book in regards that it was a meaningful religious aspect which I enjoyed but it had to be combined with awful street language and suggestions that were deplorable. I finished the book but went straight to the trash and threw it away. There was no way that I would pass the book on or share it with any one.
Kmarie avatar reviewed Our Lady of the Forest on + 529 more book reviews
Ann Holmes seems an unlikely candidate for revelation. A sixteen-year-old runaway, she is an itinerant mushroom picker who lives in a tent. But on a November afternoon, in the foggy woods of North Fork, Washington, the Virgin comes to her, clear as day.

Father Collins - a young priest new to North Fork - finds Ann disturbingly alluring. But it is up to him to evaluate - impartially - the veracity of Ann's sightings: Are they delusions, or a true calling to God? As word spreads and thousands, including the press, converge upon the town, Carolyn Greer, a smart-talking fellow mushroomer, becomes Ann's disciple of sorts, as well as her impromptu publicity manager. And Tom Cross, an embittered logger who's been out of work since his son was paralyzed in a terrible accident, finds in Ann's visions a last chance for redemption for both himself and his son.

As Father Collins searches his own soul and Ann's, as Carolyn struggles with her less than admirable intentions, as Tom alternates between despair and hope, Our Lady of the Forest tells a suspenseful, often wryly humorous, and deeply involving story of faith at a contemporary crossroads.