nle2004's review against another edition
5.0
I admire the beauty of this novel and wish it lasted a bit longer. When I tapped the next page on my Kindle and saw that the book had come to the end, I could hardly believe it was over.
I'm so happy that I read it slowly, going back and re-reading some pages, yet I'm sure I've missed a substantial part of what Mrs Byatt had put in her novel. I'm sure that when I read it next time (I definitely will), I'll get even more pleasure and will discover new issues she wanted her readers to think over.
ithaka2022's review against another edition
5.0
libkatem's review against another edition
3.0
I was hoping that if I read this book soon after "The Virgin in the Garden" it would go better. But it didn't. While I felt slightly more invested in the characters, there was nothing that made me need to turn the page. I don't really like Frederica. She's just... I don't know what it is, but I can't bring myself to like her.
And this needs to be said. I hate it in books when the author makes direct observations to the reader. It's a habit of Victorian authors and Byatt makes use of it here. I prefer to suspend reality and pretend that these characters are real. When the author makes the observation (rule 1 - show, don't tell!) it knocks me out of the story.
It's part two of a quartet, and maybe I'll read the others someday, but I think I'll be reading other Byatt books.
deea_bks's review against another edition
5.0
ameliasbooks's review
ianbanks's review against another edition
4.0
The disadvantage to coming to this series having started with the third book is that when you get near the end of the second book you are waiting for an event that heavily influences what happens in the book you started on. Then you become overly attached to particular settings and situations...
The authorial voice is very strong here; there are numerous expositional interruptions. Not the sort we get in the other books, where you get glimpses of a character's future, but full-blown digressions from the good Doctor herself talking about why she chose particular phrases or motifs or even explaining a piece of literature or artwork. It jars at first, but by about halfway through you become used to it, especially when it is explained with as much clarity as Byatt infuses it with. Not having read everything by Byatt (yet!) I don't know if this a particular quirk of hers (I haven't encountered it in any of the other books of hers I've read to date (roughly a third of her corpus) so can't really say with any authority).
Like the first book, this took some time to get going but when it does we see a much more assured and confident voice as well as new depths and dimensions to the cast of characters.
But when it came to the event that I was waiting for, I was still taken by surprise and there is a paragraph - a single paragraph, just three or four lines - in the following chapter that ruined me and caused me to shed manly tears.
Aside from the authorial inserts this is a fantastic book and I'm looking forward to the final volume (I only reread the third a few months back, so shan't be revisiting).
donnawaters's review against another edition
4.0
bloodandpoppies's review against another edition
3.0
maddyjacob's review
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.0
elsie07's review against another edition
- Strong character development? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.75