Rating:  Summary: Very Highly Recommended. Review: Although Fiona Range, the title character of her fourth book is the main focus of this story, author Mary McGarry Morris ultimately paints the portrait of a flawed family trying to maintain its place in a very confusing and complex world. Fiona Range is a satisfying, if not always easy look into the world of a prominent New England family and its one wild child. When she is quite young, Fiona is abandoned by her mother; she is denied paternity by her father, Patrick Grady; she is raised by relatives who do not understand her petulant behavior and who are constantly puzzled by her absolute lack of judgment. Fiona is 30. For the past few years, she has worked as a waitress in Chester's Coffee Shop in Dearborn, Massachusetts. Her life is stuck in a constant cycle of rebellion, failed relationships, and an endless, empty horizon. As much as she yearns to be part of the family who raised her, she is repulsed by their shallow lives and their almost insatiable need to present a perfect face to the community. Her Uncle Charles Grady is a prominent judge. Her Aunt Arlene is the perfect wife and mother, volunteering in the community and taking care of those who cannot take care of themselves. To the world, the Grady family is a model of success. Their three children are educated, employed and functioning members of society. Jack is a computer whiz. Ginny runs a day care. Elizabeth, the schoolteacher, is engaged to a wonderful doctor from New York. Their lives are picture perfect, if you don't look too close. And then there's Fiona. The trouble with you, Fiona, is you don't think before you act. The trouble with you, Fiona, is you don't think. The trouble with you, Fiona, is you. The trouble with Fiona is you. The trouble. Fiona is the trouble. There are a lot of issues raised in this book. Not all of them are resolved, but they're out there for the reader's inspection. This is not a book you read in one night. You must pace yourself in order to endure Fiona's wild abandon, Elizabeth's neuroses, Patrick Grady's madness, and ultimately, the Grady family's undoing. I liked all the characters in this book. No one was perfect and there were no Hollywood endings, all neatly tied up with red ribbons. The people who make this story work are flawed and they all struggle with life's hardest questions. In other words, these people could be REAL. And, to me, that's what quality fiction should create: real people, flaws and all, dealing with life's triumphs and tragedies, while trying to make their way in the world without inflicting too much damage on themselves and those around them. Very Highly Recommended.Terry H. Mathews Reviewer
Rating:  Summary: I should get my wasted time and money back. Review: Fiona Range is a good book for someone who does not know good literature. There are so many typos that it is distracting to someone who knows how to use grammar. Tbe plot is too simplisitic for a book this long--maybe better suited to a novella or a short-story. Also, the characters, excepting for Fiona, were very shallow and needed more purpose. Considering that the author has written much more enjoyable novels previous to this--it leaves the reader with the sense that it was intended as a money-maker, not a heart-warmer.
Rating:  Summary: Flawed Families Review: Fiona Range was raised by her prominent and successful aunt and uncle, along with their three children, in Dearborn, a small town near Boston. She finds it difficult to live up to the expectations of her "perfect" aunt and uncle and their "normal" children. Fiona is now 30, and her recklessness, unfounded trust in people, and poor judgment has earned her a reputation as an impulsive flake. She apparently sleeps with every man who crosses her path, and the book opens with her waking up and not knowing who is in her bed. But in spite of her poor judgment and many mistakes, Fiona is basically a good person and wants to help people. There is a real dichotomy between her basically good inner self and her outward appearance and actions. She is working as a waitress in the town diner, but wants to complete her education, so is taking a night class at the local college. She is surrounded by men who use her in so many ways. Patrick Grady is cruel and unstable as a result of injuries in Vietnam, and she believes him to be her father. Todd Prescott is her longest relationship (since high school), but he is wealthy and spoiled, and is constantly getting bailed out by his parents. George Grimshaw is the loyal and steady friend since high school, and former boyfriend of her cousin Elizabeth. She also becomes involved with Rudy, her cousin's fiancé. Her uncle Charles is a respected and prominent judge and is always helping out others, but can't seem to give Fiona the love and support she really needs. The intricacies of the relationships between all of these people make for interesting reading. You keep wondering what dilemma Fiona will find herself in next, and how she can extricate herself. The situation with her alleged father, Patrick Grady, deteriorates and becomes frightening, and the mystery of who he really is and his motivations will keep you engrossed until the end.
Rating:  Summary: My Nutty Friend Fiona Review: For some reason, I was completely taken with this book. I hate sappy, romantic stories or ones that have overly depressing endings. As a 30 year old like Fiona (though married), I really connected to this character. Fiona is more like a beloved old friend who keeps doing things that really tick me off. Her actions often seem completely rash from the reader's perspective. However, having made irrational, highly emotional choices myself (what woman hasn't?), I find Fiona Range to be the only book I've ever read with a main character that could easily be someone I know or, to some extent, me. And, the best part, the author presents her story without judging Fiona. The reader is allowed to do that herself. I am still recommending this to my friends. I really enjoyed it!
Rating:  Summary: take a pass Review: I found this book SO exasperating. Fiona is totally unsympathetic. Within a single paragraph, she thinks she's being dismissed by her family, then she likes them, then her feelings are hurt by some perceived slight, and on and on it goes. I thought it was carelessly written; it felt very lazy to me - it could have done with serious editing. Plus, I couldn't shake the feeling that the book was set in the 40s or 50s, which is fine, if the book REALLY were set in those decades; I had to keep reminding myself this was supposedly set in the current day. I finished the book because I just had to see if it was going to be ludicrous to the very end, and it was. Even the "happy ending" was apathetic and tacked-on. I've liked the author's other books, so I was most disappointed when I finally got my hands on this one. I did finish it, but I sure won't be passing it on to my friends!
Rating:  Summary: something I normally wouldn't read but enjoyed Review: I just finished reading Fiona Range & had to write this review. I read 150 pages in one sitting--which says a lot about a book. I have to say that when I got this book, I was enticed by the title because I like the name Fiona. When I first started reading it, I saw Fiona, the main character, as pretty much a slut & someone I wouldn't like if I ever met her.Fiona Range became really good & you saw that Fiona was more than just a slut. I could relate to her struggles of trying to fit into her conformed life with her aunt & uncle. She struggled to grow close to who she thought was her father & deal with the fact that she was 30 & had become nothing & constantly made mistakes. This novel had a very surprise ending & I really thought it was creative & well written. It's only (small) problem was that it did have some sub-plots that threw you off, but the significant events ending weaving into an understandable story. i would definitlely recommend this book, for even someone who doesn't enjoy reading. It's worthwhile!!!!
Rating:  Summary: A Grating American Novel Review: I really hoped to enjoy this book. The initial introduction to Fiona, is risque, yet pathetic. She wakes up one morning to find herself in bed, hungover from a party the evening before, with an aquaintence, whose wife was in the hospital, recovering from childbirth. And it only gets worse from there..All the male charecters are seen as Fionas' victims. From her employer to her family, they all complain of being victims to her selfishness. I couldnt sympathize at all with her. Her worst charecter in this book is the cruel and crazy Patrick Grady, who is believed to be Fiona's illigitamate father. She relentlessly persues a relationship with this terrible man because she wants to be his daughter. The author paints a one sided picture of him...never really showing any warmth or humane personality traits. It made Fiona seem even more unreal, to chase after him so relentlessly. The other charecter who was so irritating was her cousin Elizabeth. She is whiny, spineless and weak. I had wondered how she attracted so much love and attention from the other people in this book. I have to say the only reason I finished this book was that I was on a 4 hour bus trip, and it was more interesting then the scenery. On a more positive note, this book was mildly entertaining, and an easy read. It seemed like more of a soap opera plot then a book with a lot of substance, which can sometimes be fun.
Rating:  Summary: Five-plus, from a grateful, diehard fan... Review: I'm one of those people who dislikes re-reading books, or seeing a movie more than once. I'm a novelist myself (unpublished, but hopeful), and I like to gulp as much fiction and media as I can, but rarely go back over old ground. The only movie I watch over and over is the Coen Brothers' "Miller's Crossing" and the only books I seem able to re-read are those by Mary McGarry Morris. For one thing, each time I re-visit one of her novels, I find there are new layers of meaning I missed the first, and even the second time. For example, the first time I read Fiona Range, I, like some of the others who have reviewed it here, found it to be less tragic and moving than her other books, "A Dangerous Woman," "Vanished" (my favorite; it should have won the Pulitzer) and "Songs In Ordinary Time." However, I am currently re-reading it now and, contrary to what I thought was going to happen (I knew the ending, so how could it be surprising and interesting?) it has turned out to be even better BECAUSE I know the ending. Now it truly does seem tragic, a magnificent character study of a Woman Interrupted...a woman whose whole life revolves around the black hole of lost identity, a giant lie perpetuated by those who pretend to have cared for her. It's a about monstrous hypocrisy and what happens to people when they are kept from essential knowledge about themselves. It's about cruelty that drives people to self-destruct. Damn, it's good. After Faulkner and Joyce, Mary McGarry Morris has had the most significant effect on my writing. Joyce Carol Oates, Richard Ford, Russell Barnes ("Affliction"), Alice McDermott, Annie Prioux, Stephen King, Toni Morrison...they are all to be studied, and I owe them so much. But Mary is the greatest writer in America today. As another reviewer here noted, her characters are fresh, real, surprising, devoid of stereotype, human to the bone. No one writes them living and breathing as she does. With their many flaws and their heartaches, their jerkiness, their addictions, their violence and their cuteness, they are truly unforgettable. The old expression, "To know her, is to love her," is what makes these books keepers. Thanks, Mary, for the gifts.
Rating:  Summary: So-So Review: i've read all of Mary McGarry Morris's books and this one looked interesting.... and it was. The interaction among the characters as having grown up together in a small town was very true to life and my heart ached for poor Fiona. I thought the way Morris handled Fiona's loneliness and "apartness" from her surrogate family was absolutely excellent. I had a hunch early on where the plot was going, but the story held me interested enough to race through to the end. And of course the conclusion was a bit predictable. What was TOTALLY irritating and distracting, though, were all the typos and mistakes in the text! Didn't anybody EDIT this? What a shame! It almost seemed at points as if somebody had dictated the manuscript into a voice-recognition program because not only were there mispellings but words that sounded somewhat similiar in place of the correct ones. For this most annoying distraction I have to give this book fewer stars than it really deserves.
Rating:  Summary: I LOVED IT Review: Where do I start? At the beginning of course. Fiona's character jumps off the page from the start, in fact her life was thrilling to the end of the novel. Morris once again paints a complete portrait of a woman. By the time I finished I felt I knew Fiona inside and out. If she waited on me at the local diner here in town, I'd spot her before I read her nametage. But it wasn't just Fiona. This book is packed with 3-dimensional characters. The judge-what a crafty, yet somehow still respectable man. (By the way, has anyone stopped to follow how Morris portrays judges in her four novels? That would be an interesting essay itself) His wife, Aunt Arlene-keeping up appearances no matter the cost. Dear Elizabeth-Almost as complex a character as Fiona. Get this book, you won't be disappointed.
|