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The Fairfield Public Library Reader’s Advisor – Recommendations, Reviews and More

Silver Sparrow

Posted by Book Mavens on 2nd December 2011

Title: Silver Sparrow

Author:  Tayari Jones

Publisher: Chapel Hill, N.C. 2011

 Summary: What would it be like to grow up knowing that you were meant to be kept a secret?  Dana Lynn Yarboro, one of the sisters starring in Tayari Jones’ third novel, struggles with this very thing every day.  Her father, James Witherspoon, is a bigamist, and Dana and her mother Gwen are his “second” and “secret” family, a fact of which they are painfully aware.  His “first” wife and daughter, Laverne and Chaurisse, have his last name and almost of his attention and time – and they know nothing about Dana and Gwen.  James goes to great lengths to keep it that way.  So when Dana and Chaurisse meet by accident at a science fair, things get very complicated.

The first half of the novel is narrated by Dana, and the second half by Chaurisse, and both of their stories are beautifully told.   Jones does a great job portraying the complex relationships between the two families and revealing the motivations behind the web of lives they have spun.  It’s fascinating to follow them as their lives slowly interconnect, and to see how the girls’ meeting changes everyone involved.  I love the way the author builds the momentum in the story in spite of the change of narrator half-way through.  I especially liked the fact that Chaurisse’s half of the novel picks up where Dana’s left off, and wasn’t just a retelling of the same story from a different perspective.  Atlanta in the 1980’s is so wonderfully described it becomes a character itself.   All of the people in Silver Sparrow are drawn with voices that are unique and will remain with me for a long time.

If you like this, try this: “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison,  “The Untelling” or “Leaving Atlanta” by Tayari Jones

Recommended by: Mary, Branch Reference

A second look:

Set against the backdrop of 1980’s Atlanta, Silver Sparrow perfectly captures the dichotomy of family relationships. The reader will be torn, much like James, between the two families. Dana and her mother Gwen are smart, gorgeous, vibrant women while Chaurisse and her mother Laverne are plain, hard-working, and honest. Like their father, the reader will fall in love with both girls and their mothers, often forgetting that they are two scales perfectly balanced before disaster inevitably strikes.

When a chance meeting at a science fair piques Dana’s interest in Chaurisse, it is only a matter of time until their worlds collide and, ultimately, shatter.  As much as the reader feels they know each character, there is no predicting their actions when loyalties run deep- and the reader most likely will not know where their own loyalties lie.  Sad, intense, and eye-opening Silver Sparrow should not be missed.

Recommended by: LB, Technical Services Assistant

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Graveminder

Posted by Book Mavens on 5th September 2011

 

Title: Graveminder

Author: Melissa Marr

Publisher: William Morrow, 2011

Summary: Rebekkah Barrow is forced into the role of Graveminder for the town of Claysville after her grandmother is murdered.
Okay, I admit I am a sucker for a good cover and tagline. I couldn’t resist the cover photo of a creepy old barn and the tagline “Sleep well, and stay where I put you”. In this case, my lack of willpower paid off. So much more than your typical waking dead storyline, the fully developed characters are what drive this novel.
Rebekkah is the reluctant new Graveminder, and Byron, her first love, is the reluctant new Undertaker. According to an ages old contract, the role of graveminder is to tend the graves of the newly deceased to keep them from waking. The undertaker’s role is to protect her at all costs. When Bek and Byron finally realize what lies in store for them, there is no turning back. Somehow, a few of the newly deceased have awakened, and they are HUNGRY. Rebekkah and Byron must learn their roles and deliver the dead back where they belong before even more people are killed.
The characters in this novel are so interesting that the flesh eating walking dead take a backseat to the relationship between Bek and Byron. Does it make their love any less real just because their new found roles demand their devotion to each other? Should it matter? Read Graveminder and decide for yourself.

Who Might Like This?: Fans of supernatural thrillers.

Recommended by: Sue B, Circulation Coordinator

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