Rating:  Summary: A Wonderful Post-9/11 Read... Review: Peace Like a River is a novel which revolves around the main character, eleven year old Reuben Land, and his family's struggle to locate his brother, who is on the run from the law. While sometimes Reuben's narration is inconsistent in voice and age, it is truly a delight to read, a wonderful mix of humor and pathos for the Land family's situation. Swede, Reuben's sister, is a great female character, echoing Harper Lee's Scout. She's willful, poetic, strong, and engaging--- she alone is enough of a reason to read the book. Some other readers have complained of its messiness, and the novel's unanswered questions, none of which I'll go into, for fear of giving away any of the story. While there do seem to be the occasional loose threads in the novel, overall, its uplifting narrative and hopeful message redeem the novel of all of its minor problems. It is a novel of spiritual awakening and human spirit that quite simply makes you glad that you're alive.
Rating:  Summary: A Soon-to-Be Classic Review: Beutiful, Poetic, Strength of Prose. A joyous American tale by a new and glorious master of letters.
Rating:  Summary: Obviously a debut novel Review: Two stars might be a generous rating for a book I couldn't even finish. The plot and premise of the novel were very appealling to me, and I really wanted to like this book. However, the narrator's voice distracts the reader from getting into the heart of the story. Enger's presentation of Reuben constantly takes you out of the story to unrelated and uninteresting tangents. The depiction of sister Swede is unbelievably precocious and also distracting. Davy is the best character in the novel but unfortunately he disappears after the third chapter. As a reader, I could definitely tell that this was a debut novel, and it wasn't worth it to me to even finish.
Rating:  Summary: Lowe blow Review: This is a likely a great book to read, but let me say that the audiobook version read by Chad Lowe is horrendous. Lowe's geeky, "awe shucks" voice makes every character sound weak and pathetic. He especially makes the narrator sound like a feeble whiner and the father comes off dull and spineless. It created for me a situation whereby I was not able to identify with any of the characters. The story itself is great, although I felt the plot lingered on far too long than it needed to before it came to resolution. The beginning is great, but then seems to get lost in the story of side characters and other tangents. I will admit that it may have been my irritation with Lowe's dorky voice and my desire for the story to end quickly. Read the book, loss the tapes.
Rating:  Summary: A story lost in time Review: Though this story takes place in the 1960's it has the feel of a book that is lost in time, so far removed from The Beatles, Viet Nam and anything but "groovy" it ranks as a winner in it's own category. Roofing, Minnesota is a small town in the middle of America and the Land family is about to feel the aftermath and turmoil of a violent act that will take one of it's members on a run for his freedom. In the back of the reader's mind is the not so questionable guilt of the runner. The main characters are unforgettable and grow close to your heart paragraph by paragraph. Jeremiah Land is an extraordinary man with a gift from God that will simply amaze and entertain you. I found myself thinking, "How could that be?" Reuben is our narrator, and his 11 year old asthmatic son, was a miracle from birth, when his father took him in hand after 10 minutes of death, and holding him up demanded he live and breath. Swede the younger daughter writes stories and poetry like an angel and Davy who is at the center of the controversy will all have you entranced. Beautifully written, with a peace that runs through it true to it's name PEACE LIKE A RIVER will have you engrossed with the lives of it's characters from start to finish. Kelsana 2/26/02
Rating:  Summary: Gorgeous prose, an engaging narrator, a fabulous debut Review: The narrator of this breathtaking, stand-out debut novel, Reuben Land, is unable to breathe at birth and is declared dead ten minutes before his father bursts in, takes him up and commands his lungs to work. Reuben, then, is sensitive to the miracles that serendipitously attend his father and nurses a sorrowful resentment that those wonders should be squandered on mending a torn saddle or healing a bad-tempered man when Reuben's lungs are still in need. A severe asthmatic, Reuben has never enjoyed the luxury of an unconscious breath. Looking back from the vantage point of adulthood, Reuben narrates the momentous events of 1962-63 when he was eleven. His poetic, disarming voice, rich with the cadences of rural Minnesota, comes straight from the heart, captivating the reader from the first page. The middle child, Reuben admires his older brother Davy for his fearless confidence and skill and his younger sister, Swede, for her fearless intelligence and will. Reuben himself has numerous fears ( the creepiest being the dream gnome who steals his breath), but keeps most of them to himself. Their father, Jeremiah, is a man of scrupulous honesty, even temper and deep faith, whose wife left him when his faith undercut his worldly ambition. (This abandonment is one of the book's few flaws - the reasons are inadequate and, weirdly, the children seem to have no feelings about her whatsoever.) The story begins when Jeremiah, the school janitor, rescues Davy's girlfriend from a locker room assault by two schoolyard bullies. The boys swear revenge and events escalate until the pair invade the Land home and Davy shoots them dead. The newspapers laud him as a hero defending his family, then later turn on him as a villain who murdered two underprivileged boys. When Reuben, puffed up for the audience and also mindful of his father's exhortation to be honest, presents evidence at trial which seals his brother's fate, Davy breaks out of jail. Eluding the sheriff's posse, Davy becomes a hero again, the romantic outlaw of simpler days. Swede, steeped in the lore of the Old West, is beside herself with joy and begins to compose an epic poem of his exploits on the old typewriter she got for her ninth birthday. Only Jeremiah seems low, tormented by his love and fear for his son and his internal agonies over right and wrong. In the depths of winter a sign - an airstream trailer bequeathed to Jeremiah by a traveling salesman - sends them on a quest, a journey west to find Davy. The kindness of strangers is offset by the dogged presence of the FBI agent who has sworn to track Davy, a man both sinister and friendly. But at last they seem to lose him in a blizzard where they find refuge with a rawboned woman who brings something to their lives they didn't know they were missing. As the story proceeds Jeremiah must weigh his chance for happiness against his duty. His torment and his joy, though only dimly understood by Reuben, provide a strong, unsettling undercurrent. For Reuben, too, is growing beyond pirates and storied outlaws, to learn the very real power of evil in the world and, in the end, to make his choice. The story builds to a powerful, emotionally complex climax, but ends on a fantastical note, which feels more histrionic than satisfying. Despite this (not minor) disappointment, Enger's first novel is a thing of beauty. Enger's exceptional talent with language and character make this adventure, romance, and moral coming-of-age story one of the best novels I've read in a long time.
Rating:  Summary: Miracles do happen... Review: I almost want to tell Leif Enger to just stop with what he's got. The lyrical writing, the exciting yet calm plot, I just don't see how you can get any better than *Peace Like a River.* This was one of the most enjoyable novels I've read so far this year. Jeremiah Land, a faithful and sometimes miraculous man, is raising his three children alone in Roofing, Minnesota in the early 1960's when a couple of rabble rousers make the Land family a target for violence. Davy, the eldest brother, takes up arms, and ends up in jail, while Reuben and Swede decide they'll do anything to protect Davy from prosecution. When Davy escapes prison and heads for the Dakota hills, Jeremiah, Reuben, and Swede take off after him. Readers can only hope and pray for a happy reunion of the family. Readers will be hard-pressed to not find a character they can identify with or believe in. I highly recommend this novel, and also try *Plainsong* by Kent Haruf. The tones are very similar.
Rating:  Summary: Save Your Money! Review: This book is utterly boring, and the reader adds to the monotony. Perhaps any reader would have similar problems with this subject matter. The author strains to find unusual adjectives to modify almost every noun. Many of them are laughable; not funny, just laughable! The tiniest event takes page after page of detail writing. You will see what I mean when you finally come to the end. It drags on and on! Sorry, but that is how both my wife and I evaluated it.
Rating:  Summary: Enjoyable Review: I enjoyed this book because it was well written and the story was interesting. The thing I liked the most about it was the way the author portrayed the characters' relationsihp with God. It was done with restpect and acuracy. Usually Christians are not portrayed as intelligent thinkig people, but rather as fundamental wacko's. In this book you understand how the characters really feel about God and it's lovely to see the way they put God first in their everyday life and thoughts. It's well done and a pleasure to read.
Rating:  Summary: A Treat to Read!! Review: This book is wonderfully written-such a joy to read. So many times I am disappointed in endings, but not with Peace Like a River. This book is satisfying through and through. Leif Enger has such an exquisite gift with words. He can turn a phrase like no other. As I was reading this book, I kept finding passages that I just had to sit my family down and read to them aloud. They enjoyed them as much out of context as I did in. What fun! What heart and soul in this incredible book.
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