Reviews

La neige noire by Paul Lynch

afterhours's review against another edition

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4.0

A brilliant read. A truly unforgettable novel. Very evocative, dark, full of anxiety and anticipation. Raw, savage, brutal at times even. It really tugs at your heart strings. The descriptions of the Irish weather and landscape add to the overall brutality of the novel. The novel tells a reader what it is like to live and function in a close-knit community and what painful consequences of breaking that community code can be. It is a book about being an immigrant, coming back to homeland and trying to fit back into society. It is also about being a friend, a neighbour and above all about being a human.
Great piece of work.

drekklin's review against another edition

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dark emotional medium-paced
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
What a shockingly, disturbingly good book. Feels like a runaway train at the end.

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mermaidsherbet's review against another edition

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dark emotional sad tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0


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shickenbutt's review against another edition

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4.0

Beautiful but depressing. Not a fan of his writing style (which sadly continues to be popular - run-on sentences to "help the flow of the writing" and dialogue without quotation marks), but I got used to it. Although this was a short book, it definitely should be read in sips - not gulps.

nollreads's review against another edition

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5.0

Wow, what a start to my Irish Counties Challenge. I hardly feel worthy to review this novel as I'm pretty sure Paul Lynch utters more beautiful turns of phrase whilst mumbling in his sleep than I can when at my most articulate. Although relatively short, this novel forces you to take your time with exquisite prose that you'll want to savor. Slow moving and not consisting of a huge amount of plot, the flowery writing and gentle pace actually serve to exaggerate the turmoil and devastation felt by the characters in the novel. It took me well over a week to read this book, because I had to take it in short bursts, but despite the dense prose and lack of speech punctuation there is a simplicity to the story and a realism to the characters that makes it easy to pick up and recall everything with ease.

I feel I should probably warn potential readers that this is an immensely bleak book, which depicts the gradual self-destruction of Barnabas Kane and the fallout of that cast onto his family. I sincerely hope, however, that would not put anyone off reading it. There is so much to love about this book, offset as that is by the tragedy it portrays. The characters are so credibly drawn, but more than that, striking is the picture of a rural community set in its traditional ways, stubborn, opposed to newness and change; of conflict caused by the 'local strangers', the Kane family, as Barnabas impinges on community belief and heritage in his attempt to salvage his livelihood from misfortune.

A subplot featuring the Kane son, Billy, is told through diary entries, and while interesting in its own right, is ultimately never solidly tied back into the main story. Towards the end, I thought more was going to be outrightly resolved than actually was - in fact one pervasive question is never answered at all - but this did not detract from the story, which actually shocked me three separate times with dramatic events and, while unexpected, in hindsight it feels like things could not have gone any other way.

A beautiful, heart-breaking story absolutely worth reading.
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