Home :: Books :: Literature & Fiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction

Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
STONES FROM THE RIVER

STONES FROM THE RIVER

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 4 .. 30 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Simply superb
Review: This is one of the best books I have read in a long time. The story is woven into a rich and vibrant fabric. There are those who would criticize it as an apology for German attrocities and compare that time in history to our VietNam war. Not the same. VietNam was brought to us in living color every night on every TV in every home. Telecommunication in Europe in the '40s was a lot slower and during that time in Germany news was sifted, sanitized and doled out in small portions via press and radio. Never mind that. Other critics complain that 3 year old Trudi could never have been so "knowing". Ha. This is ... hello ... FICTION! That notwithstanding this is a wonderful book. I thought Trudi was a brilliant character, full of pathos and humor, and very, very human. It is not perfect literature. It's not an accurate historical account of pre- and post-war Germany. It is a very readable, thought-provoking book; an interpretation of history by a gifted writer. I particularly enjoyed the metaphor of the "stones" and the river: ever changing, always the same. Doesn't make sense? Oh well, that's life. I would wholeheartedly recommed this book to anyone who appreciates a good story.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Silent No Longer
Review: When I described The Tin Drum to a friend she said I should read Stones from the River. I expected it to pale by comparison with Gunther Grass' wonderful novel about a dwarf. But Hegi has created another epic, this one from a woman's perspective. Through Trudi's eyes, we understand that beliefs are less important than knowledge, silence is complicity when evil is abroad, differences in our lives are necessary and beautiful, how the politics of a time can warp and nearly destroy a whole generation, but especially that acknowledgement and forgiveness are prerequisites to healing. Hege's detailed descriptions of clothes, food, and personalities together with the endless tales and gossips of a small town make this a spellbinder. The anonymous benefactor keeps hope and goodness alive throughout. As a reader who loves to enter other times in history through fictional characters, I was both saddened and thoroughly satisfied with my visit to Burgdorf on the Rhein in WWII Germany.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excitingly moving
Review: Reading Ursula Hegi's book, Stones from a River, for the first time was excitingly moving. The book is told by Trudi Montag, a dwarf girl, a zwerg in a little town of Burgdorf, Germany. Trudi is isolated from the other people in town because of her physical difference. Trudi tells her story of her life and brings you through her struggles and high points and you travel with her feeling her pain and her happiness. But, it is because of Trudi's difference that she matures and learns about other people. Trudi becomes wise, and sees that she knows other people better than she knows herself. Trudi up holds her self values, especially when at a time during World War II when you did not have a choice. Trudi held true to her values and was very strong willed in what she believed in. During this horrible time in history she shapes who she is by reacting to the war and the persecution of people who were different around her. Trudi telling about her life keeps you intrigued and always wanting to read more. The story was compelling and a good construal of history. I would recommend this book to anyone who loves an excellent story to read with history in it.
Shana McMahon, a student at Mercy High School

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Pure Perfection
Review: The first time I read "Stones From the River" was with my book club. I believe it was the only book we all categorized equally with "To Kill a Mockingbird" and "The Grapes of Wrath"
Yes, it was that good.

The second time I read it was for the pure pleasure of Hegi's words. Her powerful voice is translated through Trudi Montog, the main character. A German girl whom happens to be a dwarf (Zwerg) A misfit. Who hangs from doorframes until her fingers are numb. "Grow, grow!" she prays to an ineffective God...why else would he create her short, stubby, ugly, and utterly despicable.
But she was given a gift. The wonderful gift of story-telling. This will save her as humour saves the character in "A Beautiful Life" or at least made life tolerable.

In the midst of Trudie's battles, Hitler is rising. Slowly, like a cancer spreading. Jews are being taken from their homes, disappearing, losing their German passports, given a yellow star to wear on their chests.
Nobody believes it is really happening.
"They are only working at those camps." they say.

INDIFFERENCE is worse than anything. Indifference makes monsters grow.

"Stones From the River" is about the human condition during war. How it can sometimes turn us into animals, Intolerant of our differences. Hating one another because of them.

Who understands better than Trudie about the ugliness of being different...."They will find anything. Anything to separate one from another. Widows. Jews. Swergs. Madness. Hitler will find something."

"Stones" is not an easy read. I wanted to scream at times...WHY did you all let this happen? WHY?" And at the same time...the story was so beautiful, I carry some of the sentences around like jewels to savor later.

In the end, Trudie accepts herself as she is...too much has already happened to feel sorry for herself now.

..."And what to end the story with. It had to do with what to enhance and what to relinquish. And what to embrace." ...STONES

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A flowing saga, with nuggets of beauty
Review: Stones from the River deals with a heroine who is everything a heroine is not. She is a small sized person, a 'dwarf' as it were, not remarkably pretty and not truly bestowed with the milk of human kindness in all spheres like the heroines of romantic stories. Yet for me, she and the book are like a passionate love affair with life, feelings, honesty, brutality, beauty and redemption.
The book traces Trudi's growth from birth, seeing her mother turn crazy, her tribulations and triumphs due to her short stature. Trudi curses, abuses, gossips, has her insecurities, trades off her secrets and yet somehow you cant help admiring the gumption of this pint sized heroine. How she and her father help their Jewish friends during the holocaust, her wanton curiosity in luring men on the basis of false information, her tumultous inner world, her forthrightedness.
There are other players in the saga of Trudis stories...the unknown benefactor who blesses her town with strange gifts, the children of Trudi's youth who live out their own tableus, the lady who dresses her son as a girl, Leo, Trudi's father - truly a character to rival Atticus in To Kill a Mocking Bird. I think women will identify with the emotions that Trudi confesses to..the loss of a man, the strength of appearance, the solidariy of friends, the gain of ones esteem. Truly...a wonderful flowing river with enough beauty, like the stones in the river.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful!
Review: I have owned this book for 6 years. I have picked up this book a dozen time- if not more- and I could never get past the first page. I forced myself to read this book and I have to admit it's one of the best books I have read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Touching Novel
Review: Ursula Hegi's "Stones from the River" is a very touching novel about a zwerge (dwarf) girl, Trudi, who lives in Burgdorf, Germany. She has many difficulties living in a small town, with many people isolating her because of her physical differences, and has only her father for support. As she grows up, she makes it her job to know everyone in the town's business. Trudi uses the power of gossip to help herself be noticed and accepted in her town. Hegi can therefore weave the stories of the people in Burgdorf around the central story of the maturing Trudi. With the help of some other misfit, yet lovable, friends, Trudi is able to expand and grow during the second World War. Through all of Hegi's perfect literary usage, one can become completely submerged in the time and life of a young girl, desperately trying to fit in. I recommend this book to anyone who understands how it is to want to be "normal".

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Meghan from CT
Review: Stones from the River by Usula Heigi focuses on the life of a dwarf in Germany during the Nazi occupation. The author uses Trudi's love of storytelling and small town gossip to weave a story not only of the main characters life, but of all those around her. The begining of the book was slow but as Trudi grew the stories began to pick up. The presence of the Nazi's brings a historical element to the novel. I would recommend this book-but you have to trudge through the slow begining to get to the heart of the story. You ultimately get to see Trudi and all those around her mature into acceptance and understanding.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I couldn't put it down
Review: I read books during my 30-minute lunch break at work, and I sped through this novel, always wanting to sit for longer than those 30 minutes each day! Hegi weaves a beautiful story that made me laugh out loud, even cry at times. The characters are wonderful, and Hegi's descriptions really put you in early 20th-century Burgdorf. She also does a good job of weaving connections that support the themes like storytelling and individuality/differences as beauty.

Reading the back cover before reading the novel actually made me wonder if I would like it, but I'm glad I did read it; the cover just does not do the book justice.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Solitude and Diversity in World War II
Review: This book is a book about diversity, and the solitude it brings on. Trudi Montag is a dwarf -a Zwerg- and this condition isolates her from other people, who are not able to see the likeness that lies under physical diversity. But it is from her diversity that she can observe and understand life of other people better than themselves... the same as you understand happiness better when you are missing it... and in this continuous understanding, through the hurting consciousness of her diversity, Trudi becomes a woman with deep feelings and a particular wisdom... someone you really would like to meet.
Diversity. The book is also about the World War II and the vicissitudes of the Jews under the Nazism. Somehow this book makes understandable something that is really not understandable. It shows how such a thing could happen: because of prejudgements of some, the fear of others, the indifference and the too weak opposition of people who didn't agree. Since I live in a little village, like Burgdorf, I could easily tell which one of the inhabitants would behave like Herr Blau, which one like Herr Immers or Frau Weiler or Leo Montag... Things have not changed as much as we think. Crualty diminished so much in this years, but indifference grew the same rate...


<< 1 2 3 4 .. 30 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates