Reviews

Burial Rites by Hannah Kent

yoneb_26's review against another edition

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5.0

Beautiful

elizabethtye's review against another edition

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4.0

4/5. Physical book. Excellent read. The story is based on true historical events and it is clear that the author performed great research of the events in her story. The story was written quite elegantly and I felt immersed in it. There are not many books about Iceland and I learned so much about life there in the 1800s. I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys historical fiction as it was so well-written.

paperlove's review against another edition

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3.0

"Das Seelenhaus" ist eine Art historischer Krimi, der auf wahren Begebenheiten beruht. Das Setting in Island hat mir besonders gut gefallen, denn ich habe bislang wahrscheinlich noch keinen Roman gelesen, der auf dieser wunderschönen Insel spielt (die ich auch gerne mal im echten Leben bereisen möchte!). Was mir ebenfalls gut gefallen hat, ist die düstere Atmosphäre, die die Autorin allein durch ihre Worte vermitteln konnte.
Agnes Schicksal hat mich zwar sehr mitgenommen, aber leider verläuft die Erzählung sehr langsam und unaufgeregt, dass bei mir nicht wirklich Spannung aufkommen wollte. Es wird zwar nach und nach aufgeklärt, was sich damals wirklich abgespielt hat, aber so richtig packen konnte mich die Handlung nicht.
Auch die Charaktere sind in meinen Augen sehr unnahbar und blass geblieben und ich konnte gerade zu den vielen Nebencharakteren, die ebenfalls wichtige Rollen einnehmen, keine wirkliche Bindung aufbauen.

Die Sprecher:innen machen ihre Sache gut und die Abwechslung zwischen der männlichen und weiblichen Erzählstimme, hat mir gut gefallen.

Aufgrund meiner Kritikpunkte vergebe ich abschliessend durchschnittliche 3 Sterne - ich kann die vielen guten Bewertungen aber dennoch nachvollziehen. Ich bin nur leider kein Fan von Slow Pace Romanen.

tlchand's review against another edition

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5.0

haunting story. excellent writing.

nicstar's review against another edition

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5.0

Compelling story about the last executions to take place in Iceland in 1829.

luthiennienna's review against another edition

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5.0

Wow, what a novel! Haunting and so moving. A new favourite author.

tsenteme's review against another edition

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5.0

Εκπληκτικό. Διαβάζεται χωρίς ανάσα. Πολύ ενδιαφέρον θέμα, που βασίζεται σε αληθινή ιστορία και συγκεκριμένα στην τελευταία εκτέλεση που έγινε στην Ισλανδία το 1828. Πολύ δυνατή η αφήγηση σε πρώτο πρόσωπο της ηρωίδας.

"Όσο κράτησε η δίκη, τσιμπούσαν και άρπαζαν τα λόγια μου σαν πουλιά. Έψαχναν την ενοχή μου, όπως ψάχνουν τα πεινασμένα πουλιά τους καρπούς στις βατομουριές. Δεν με άφησαν να πω τα πράγματα με τον δικό μου τρόπο, να πω τι έγινε. Πήραν ότι θυμόμουν από το Ιλουγκάσταντιρ, από τον Νάταν, και τ' ανακάτεψαν, τα 'στυψαν, έβαλαν κάτι φριχτό, κάτι τρομαχτικό. Έκοψαν κι έραψαν την κατάθεση μου για κείνη τη νύχτα και με παρουσίασαν κακιά κι αποτρόπαιη. Ό,τι κι αν είπα, μου το πήραν και το άλλαξαν, ώσπου η ιστορία δεν ήταν πια δική μου."

maeckiesen's review against another edition

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dark emotional sad fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

theladydoor's review against another edition

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4.0

"Don't judge a book by its cover" I'm really not a fan of that phrase. If I followed it all the time, I wouldn't read half of the great books I read now. I picked up this ethereal and deeply affecting novel because the cover struck me as unbearably beautiful. There's just something about the script against the blurred portrait of a woman's profile, and the color scheme that reached out to me. And the decision paid off.

This novel is about the death of Agnes Magnusdottir, and the weeks leading up to it. She was the last woman to be executed in Iceland, but she was also so much more. The story revolves around Agnes yes, but it is also about the family who must care for her in the weeks before her execution. They start out as unsympathetic and churlish towards Agnes, whom they know to have killed two men. But as time goes by, they begin to learn her story and grow to care for the doomed woman.

As they do, so does the reader. Agnes begins telling the story of her pitiful, thankless life that begins with complete parental abandonment. As a poor girl in the isolated wilds of Iceland, Agnes must hire herself out as a workmaid, doing hard labor in harsh environments. Until she meets Natan, the man who she loves and then, is accused of killing.

Kent does a wonderful job of evoking the atmosphere of Iceland in the 1800's. Her language is beautiful and evocative, and I found myself saddened upon finishing the novel, and not just for Agnes.

aletteri's review against another edition

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5.0

Heart breaking, lyrical, and so very human. This book will stay with me for a long time. The audiobook version is singularly mesmerizing. The narrator brings Agnes into haunting and brutal reality.