Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Reviews of Strange Fits of Passion

Strange Fits of Passion
Strange Fits of Passion
Author: Anita Shreve
ISBN-13: 9780349105864
ISBN-10: 0349105863
Publication Date: 6/5/2003
Rating:
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
 3

3.3 stars, based on 3 ratings
Publisher: Time Warner Books Uk
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

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

candieb avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 239 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 8
I've read a few Shreve novels, the first being The Pilot's wife, which was wonderful. I read a couple of others they were just "okay", but this is definitely a good one. It's pretty hard to read in places, it is about domestic abuse, but it also makes you ask yourself some tough questions - at least it did me. There are so many layers to life and to the choices we make - AND to the consequences of those choices. This is a very well written novel. It took me a bit to get into it, but once I was there, I was THERE. In the end, my heart ached mostly for Emily. For the unanswered question in her life, for everything she had been through. Interesting that she was such a small character, but was the one that left me with the most thoughts.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 8 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
Great read, different because each chapter is from a different character's point of view. I had to check to see that it was a fiction book because it read as a reporter gathering facts about the case.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 75 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
Another dynamite book by Anita Shreve, it's the story of a couple who appear from the outside to have a stable marriage when the exact opposite is actually true. The woman escapes with her daughter to a small town in Maine and tries to have a fresh start, but her husband continues to pursue her. Excellent book - I highly recommend it.
ScrappinNanny avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on
Helpful Score: 4
Couldn't put this book down. Loved it. Great story with message that makes you think what you would do in that situation.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 102 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
Anita Shreve has such a beautiful way with the language, and this is another of her splendid novels, again telling the truth about people and relationships. It is moving and thought-provoking, and brings alive both the characters and the small town in Maine in which they find themselves. Or lose themselves. Sad, and compassionate, and moving.
luvbooks avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 126 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
I highly recommend this book! It is very insightful and moving! A must-read!
checkingmypulse avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on
Helpful Score: 3
fantastic story. didn't want to put this down!
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 17 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Another wonderful Anita Shreve book. I love books that make you feel everything the characters are feeling. I hated to see it end! If you are a Shreve fan, this is a must read.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 3 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
a little different but interesting.
Modaba avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 75 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This book is very well written. It's a very intense tale of a very intense situation. As many of Shreve's novels do, this one left me with questions and much after thought. I find myself feeling for Caroline as the real victim in this story. I find myself wondering about Helen Scofield and what makes her tick...how she sleeps at night. As always, Shreve has created characters with great complexities.
maggiemaynj avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 32 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I loved this book. An abused wife,tells her story.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 52 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Anita Shreve has a way of writing that cuts to the heart of the matter. This story, one of domestic violence told through the distant eye of a reporter, has all the elements one rarely sees in a novel about the topic. Told through flashbacks, interviews with people on the peripheral of the oncoming storm and those who have their own opinions of the murder on that frigid Maine coast, the story shows what others see of domestic violence, looking from the outside in -- and the answers are surprising, heartbreaking, and infuriating.

From the very beginning of the book, it is clear the abused wife has killed her husband. Was she justified? Would it have come down to her life or his? It even begs the question that surprised me the most: Why did she wait so long?

For anyone who has gone through domestic abuse or knows someone who has, this book holds a lot of insight that will change the way you view the world around you.
boatdrinks avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on
Helpful Score: 1
Easy to read, well described characters and settings. A great Shreve novel!
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on
Helpful Score: 1
Although sad and somewhat predictable as it starts at the end, I found this book well written and somewhat compelling. It reminded me very much of Julia Roberts' movie Sleeping with the Enemy. , Definitely an easy light read despite the subject matter.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on
Helpful Score: 1
One of my favorites by this author.
recyclist1954 avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 33 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Through the voices of its characters, given in interviews with a woman reporter, a tale of abuse and murder is told. The main character is an abused woman -- a woman who, to all others, appears to be living a perfectly loving marriage, but whom endures all manner of abuse. As with so many of those suffering this unique form of torture, she believes she is in some part to blame for the abuse. She feels she is complicit in some way because she allows it to happen. And the more it continues to happen, the more she feels her only hope it that one day it will end. It does, thanks to her own strength and the love of another. Knowing someone who has endure such abuse made this book extremely powerful to me.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 13 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A book about domestic abuse.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on
Helpful Score: 1
My favorite Anita Shreve book.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on
Helpful Score: 1
One of Anita Shreve's Best!!
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 69 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I really liked this book. Anita Shreve is one of my favorites!
blacktoastintolerate avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 18 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I'm not sure how this ended up being the last Anita Shreve book for me to read, but it was worth the wait. This is a very painful story, but I think it is her best (I would have said Change of Altitude before this one). As horrible as the abuse was that the main character suffered, it paled in comparison to the blow she received from the media. In the world we live in we are guilty until proven innocent and if guilt makes a better story than innocence...you know the outcome.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 7 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
More good writing from Anita Shreve. She writes from several different points of view in this story giving you insight into each characters depth and personality. One of her better works
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 16 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I enjoyed the book. Anita Shreve writes about a woman who finds the strength to try and regain her life and move forward. Well written and compeling.
lovegoodbooks avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 55 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Riveting read. Well written.
pegpyle avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 11 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
very disappointing - typical domestic abuse story where woman is protrayed as helpless - where are stories about strong women - why are we always protrayed as weak and helpless??
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 17 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Book is well written, however not one of Shreve's best. Plot is unusual and sort of expected love story. Title has nothing to do with content and cover picture is just made to lure you on with sex content which is not all that much in plot. Good depiction on small Main town and kind people.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 54 more book reviews
A lone woman and her infant, running away from an abusive marriage; a wintry ocean house that beckons you to stay safe and comfortable within its walls; women who reach out to you and gift you with thier friendship; a man who offers love and safety; a murder, a suicide and you have all the makings for a great story! It touched all bases with me!
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 379 more book reviews
This is an early Anita Shreve book, and the subject is domestic violence and its tragic consequences. The book is a compilation of observations by different people as told in court and to the writer who wrote a book based on her correspondence with the domestic abuse victim. The reasoning of the abused wife for staying with the abuser is potent and pathetic. I was certain that she would have been drawn to another abuser eventually if she hadn't found this particular one.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 4 more book reviews
not her best work. hard to get into, and slow
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 75 more book reviews
Mary chose St. Hilaire, Maine, becuase it was very small and far away from New York City. And everyone in town knew right away she was running. A woman with a baby alone. A woman with dark glasses that didn't quite hide her horribly beaten face. She gave her name as MAre Amesbury, but that was not true. What was ture was her fear-and that she had not run far enough. For soon there would be murder, a rape charge, and suicide in St. Hilaire. And then one last betrayal: An ambitious woman journalist would write the story of Mare Amesbury that would haunt her to the grave.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 158 more book reviews
Wonderful story that will break you heart.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 24 more book reviews
I really enjoyed this book. A very good story line. It got my attention from the beginning.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 2 more book reviews
This was a good book. If you like Anita Shreve then you will like this. You feel for the main character and what she goes through as a dedicated mother and wife.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on
A book I thoroughly enjoyed! Told from multiple points of view, the story builds in different directions. A good reminder that "truth" is often a gray area.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 275 more book reviews
This was an interesting book...Anita Shreve weaves a tale of cruelty and abuse, love lost and found. It is an educational book as well attesting to just how devastating domestic abuse can be. It is also, as the back cover says, "...a powerful portrait of truth and deception."
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 51 more book reviews
Reminds me of the 3 blind men and the elephant, one feeling the trunk, one feeling the tail and one feeling the leg. They each described the elephant as they "saw" it. So, too, the characters in this book "saw" and applied their own point of view to the dilemma therein. Even at the end of the book, the reader is not sure what to believe. We get to partake in the "seeing". Good book!
penguincollector avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 4 more book reviews
I enjoyed this book. Good read.
Bookfanatic avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on
This isn't the Anita Shreve book I'd recommend to others. I didn't enjoy reading this emotionally unsatisfying story filled with alcoholism, domestic violence and other forms of violence. On the surface, the Ivy League educated husband and wife have an ideal marriage, but as we all know appearances can be deceiving.

The story, which is set in the late 1960 or early 1970s, follows a sequence of events set mostly in a small cold town in Maine filled with a cast of colorful characters that you'd find in small cold Maine towns. I skimmed parts of the book just to see what happens at the end although you can tell from the first couple of pages what the ending is likely to be since the story starts off from the adult daughter's perspective. I'd recommend "The Last Time They Met" if you want to read one of Shreve's best works of fiction
Readnmachine avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 1479 more book reviews
It's not a new story -- an abusive relationship escalates until the victim flees, the aggressor finds her, and violence ensues.

Shreve has chosen to approach it via the stories of multiple people involved, including the writer whose cover story in a major magazine may have influenced the eventual verdict. The multiple-voice narration works well, but the magazine story (which is included toward the end of the narrative) feels very clumsy and poorly written, in marked contrast to Shreve's normal style.

And underlying the whole thing is a level of discomfort with the actions of the victim. The reader must keep reminding him/herself that the story, set in 1971, far predates the infamous "burning bed" incident of 1977 in which a long-abused woman killed her sleeping husband, and the 1978 Rideout case in Oregon, which led to legal recognition of marital rape and established it as a crime. Even given the era's lack of acknowledgement of the widespread nature of domestic abuse and the lack of legal/social support available for victims, it's difficult to understand many of the main character's actions.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 8 more book reviews
Another great one by this terrific author. An excellent copy.
sealady avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 657 more book reviews
Oversize PB, Second Shreve title. Everyone believes Maureen and Harrold English, 2 successful NYC journalists, have a happy, stable marriage. It's the early 70's and no one discusses or even suspects domestic abuse.......intense, but so well written.
Munro avatar reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 95 more book reviews
The reader is left to uncover the truth in this labryinth of a tale, a riveting story told within the framework of one reporter's notes and a woman's letters from prison. Everyone believes that Maureen and Harrold English, two successful New York City journalists, have a happy, stable marriage. It's the early '70s and no one discusses or even suspects domestic abuse. But after Maureen suffers another brutal beating, she flees New York with her infant daughter and seeks refuge in a small coastal town in Maine. The weeks pass slowly, and just as Maureen begins to heal physically and emotionally, Harrold finds her, bringing the story to a violent, unforgettable end.
reviewed Strange Fits of Passion on + 81 more book reviews
From the cover:

Everyone believes that Maureen and Harrold English, two successful New York City journalists, have a happy, stable marriage. It's the early '70s and no one discusses or even suspects domestic abuse. But after Maureen suffers another brutal beating, she flees with her infant daughter to a coastal town in Maine. The weeks pass slowly, and just as Maureen settles into her new life and new identity, Harrold reappears, bringing the story to a violent, unforgettable climax. A labyrinth of a tale with an ingenious structure, Strange Fits of Passion is also a powerful portrait of truth and deception.