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Book Reviews of The Moon Sisters

The Moon Sisters
The Moon Sisters
Author: Therese Walsh
ISBN-13: 9780307461605
ISBN-10: 0307461602
Publication Date: 3/4/2014
Pages: 288
Rating:
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
 8

3.5 stars, based on 8 ratings
Publisher: Crown
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

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

reviewed The Moon Sisters on + 380 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Summary:
Beth Moon has taken her own life, leaving her two grown daughters to sift through and figure out what to do. Their mother was a writer and often lived within a dream world that was more important to her than the family around her. This has left each daughter with some scars that neither has really dealt with. Jazz has grown up into a very logical woman. While emotionally a little more closed off, she has goals and is strong enough to reach them. Her sister, Olivia, is a lot different. Olivia has an odd way of seeing things. She is very spiritual, dreamy, and impulsive. When Olivia packs a suitcase full of her mother's ashes on a plan to travel to the place that her mother dreamed and wrote about, Jazz is not surprised but also not happy. This leads the two sisters on a journey that includes many new people, places, and trouble. The two girls get lost both in the physical and metaphysical sense. In order to accept their mother's death, both sisters have to go through their grieving process and also face the issues between the two of them.

My thoughts:
This is an emotional ride. There were definitely times that I got a tissue out to dab my eyes. Jazz and I are very similar. In that case, it felt like Walsh was writing me on her pages and made me face how I would react in these circumstances. I do not have a sister, but because I felt so connected to Jazz, Olivia definitely got on my nerves. It was difficult for me to see it her way, even though she narrates every other chapter.
Another thing Walsh does so well is write. I know that sounds silly, but she has excellent word choice and her sentences flow beautifully together. She switches between Jazz and Olivia narrating their chapters and there is a clear distinction between each voice. A lot of the time, I feel like there is an author's voice that overshadows the character's, but not here. Jazz is very distinctive and so is Olivia. Olivia's chapters are more lyrical than Jazz. Since she sees things differently, it almost reminds me of times where I'm laying in bed clinging to a dream and narrating what is happening. You know that it's not quite right, but it's the only way to describe what's going on. Because of this, I found Olivia's chapters to be more descriptive. She has more texture in the writing, but Jazz is easier to follow. I see end points for Jazz.
All together, this is a wonderful novel about grief and family. While the adventure may be the overarching plot, the growth between each sister is definitely the highlight. I highly recommend it even as a cross over book between adult and upper teen literature.
reviewed The Moon Sisters on + 379 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I wanted to like this book, but was disappointed as the story unfolded. The sisters' relationship and their grief over the probable suicide of their mother should have been riveting. It wasn't. Both girls were irritating individually and together, and their journey to their mother's "magical" place became tiresome. I appreciate the opportunity from LT to read it, but can't recommend it.
thestephanieloves avatar reviewed The Moon Sisters on + 241 more book reviews
"If you live your whole life hoping and dreaming the wrong things, what does that mean about your whole life?"

Beth Moon believed in one thing her entire adulthoodsomething that surpassed the importance of her husband, children, and self. Beth Moon was a writer, one who incorporated her dream into every word she penned, and one who penned words into every dream she dreamed. Upon recognizing the inevitable void in her entire crux of belief, she fell into a terrifying depression; and soon after, she took her own life.

But this is not the story of Beth Moon. Not really, anyways. This is the story of Beth Moon's untimely, ill-fated death: the uncovering of and reconciliation with her past, her ailments, her baggage. This is the story of her dreams and her writing: her unsent letters and unfinished novel. Ultimately, however, this is the story of her daughters, Jazz and Olivia Moon, and more importantly: of their inheritance.

Olivia's reality has always been bizarre, so when she decides to toss her mother's ashes into a suitcase and leave her isolated West Virginian hometown to go off to fulfill her mother's yearnings, Jazz isn't all that surprised.

"[Olivia has] never been the poster child for sense."

Olivia's unfaltering quest propels the clashing sisters into what begins as a risky adventureinvolving traveling, train-hoppers, and the unforgiving wildernessand ends in devastating but simultaneously uplifting family revelations that makes The Moon Sisters one of the most evocative and perceptive adult coming-of-age novels I've ever read.

Narrated in alternating first-person voices of the two sisters, the novel elegantly embodies the suffocation and restlessness that arises from living in a small town, as well as the many faces and stages of grief. Readers follow both Jazz and Olivia's physical and emotional journeys as they lose their way, find their way, fall apart, and fall in love; with this progression, readers discover how each sister deals with her own denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and finally, triumphantly: acceptance.

One of the most significant questions Therese Walsh raises through both of the Moon daughters is on the worthwhileness of hoping and believing. The elusiveness of dreamsa once-comforting notionincreasingly causes both sisters distress as they reflect upon their respective childhoods and their mother's dismal reason for existence. Is it smart to hope and dream? Is it safe? Does it ever end in anything other than disappointment?

I was impressed by how realistic Jazz, the older sister, isso flawed and easy to sympathize with. It was difficult for me to like her because she's so uptight, so logical, but I identify with her in so many other ways. Olivia, on the other hand, is a brightly burning characterboth on the pages, and off. Her way of thought is difficult to penetratepartly due to the synesthesia, partly due to the undeveloped sense of maturitybut it doesn't make her any less distinct; she's a colorful, imaginative character who's entirely offbeat, but that much more lovable. Therese Walsh is excellent with describing the flavor of words and the appearance of sounds and the way a person can smell like the sun. As in Amaryllis in Blueberry and A Mango-Shaped Space, the author vividly creates a different kind of reality from within Olivia; the effect is subtly hallucinogenic and staggeringly poetic.

While Hobbs, Olivia's secretive train-hopping companion, is a minor character, his relationship with Olivia smolders, ignites... intoxicates. I won't give too much away, but their slow-building rapport made me melt and shatter and want to cry. The Moon Sisters isn't explicitly a romance, but it contains overwhelming glimpses into the sheer capacity and capability of the human connection, that will desperately make you wish it was.

Illuminated by Walsh's mesmerizing, commanding voice, The Moon Sisters reads dreamlikemagical and dizzying and airybut still possesses the emotional weight of coping and continuingthe care, keeping, and purging of ghosts, if you will. Readers will easily identify with the firmly planted emotions regarding tortured souls, family bonds, and the weakness and resilience that comes with being human.

Pros: Perfectly blends adventure, family drama, and personal reflection together // Exquisite style // Both sisters' points of view are equally refreshing and intriguing // Olivia and Hobbs... ugh ♥ // Story lulls in pace, but the tension makes it impossible to put down // Emotionally, powerfully reflective of the human heart and propensity to dream // Trippy, dreamlike perspectives are so well constructed

Cons: Slow start // Didn't like how Beth Moon's letters are actually displayed. They seem much too private and were disappointing solely because it seems impossible to write them the way I imagined them

Verdict: An intricate, intimate portrait of one young woman's quest to carry out her deceased mother's unfulfilled dreamas well as her older sister's determination to put an end to itThe Moon Sisters is a gorgeously crafted and expressive examination of the importance of sticking together as a family, maintaining fair perspective, and the harmful but necessary means of self-preservation. Offering endless discussion on topics such as the true difference between blindness and sight, the role and impact of mothers, and the dangers of the foolish fire that is hope, this would make a terrific book-club read. Therese Walsh skillfully weaves a complicated story with even more complicated roots in this glorious second novel; I love and recommend it wholeheartedly.

Rating: 9 out of 10 hearts (5 stars(: Loved it! This book has a spot on my favorites shelf.

Source: Complimentary copy provided by publisher via tour publicist in exchange for an honest and unbiased review (thank you, Random House and TLC!).
njmom3 avatar reviewed The Moon Sisters on + 1364 more book reviews
The Moon Sisters is story about siblings - the love and the hate and the rivalry between siblings. It is also a story about the parent and child relationship - how that can impact a person their whole lives through and how that can be completely different for two siblings. The book reads well to begin, becomes a little slow in the middle, and comes to a satisfying ending.

Read my complete review at: http://www.memoriesfrombooks.com/2014/02/the-moon-sisters.html

*** Reviewed for GoodReads First Reads program ***