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Claudia Casper

Autor von The Reconstruction

3 Werke 135 Mitglieder 4 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

Über den Autor

Bildnachweis: claudiacasper.com

Werke von Claudia Casper

The Reconstruction (1996) 71 Exemplare
The Mercy Journals (2016) 56 Exemplare

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Consumed this book today, enthralled and horrified by the world it represents and the similarities with the news.
Won't post much of the story to avoid spoilers but this is a definite must-read. Well- told and gripping, the book is filled with just enough small details that you inhabit the dystopian world and feel the unease permeating the book.
I feel unsettled as I finish it, wanting to ask questions, curious, and yet it all hangs together, perfect and whole. Read it.
 
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Dabble58 | 1 weitere Rezension | Nov 11, 2023 |
The story of a near-future veteran coping with PTSD and a deadbeat kid brother. (Oh, and the collapse of society and it's rebirth under a centralized world government.) More of a character study than anything, a lot of world building was left out of this thin volume. Which is fine, writing science fiction isn't everyone's bag. I think she did a good job at telling this guy's story; the second half does a great job at playing out the story and building tension. You know how it's going to end, but she keeps you turning the page to find out when it's going to end. I enjoyed this and I'll definitely pick up her next book.… (mehr)
½
 
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miken32 | 1 weitere Rezension | Nov 25, 2016 |
The Continuation of Love by Other Means - a tepid tale of a father-daughter relationship

Alfred is a seven year-old boy in Hitler's Germany. When he and his father return from a short trip to the mountains his mother is gone. His father seems unconcerned and says maybe she's gone to visit her cousin. She never returns, indeed is never heard from again.

During WWII Alfred stays with his maiden aunts in the countryside. In the final days of the war he witnesses Russian soldiers rape one of them.

These two events subconsciously affect the rest of his life.

Alfred emigrates to Canada, becomes an engineer, marries Beth, and has a daughter, Carmen. Four years later he's divorced and moves to South Africa.

Now author Claudia Casper has the point of view fluctuate between Carmen, who lives with her mother and Alfred who is a serial adulterous and continues to get married and have families.

The Continuation of Love by Other Means is the story of this relationship. Specifically, it is a story about how one parent's life impacts on their child.

As Carmen grows up she visits her father in various parts of the world where he works as a mining engineer. She has fleeting relationships with her stepmothers and half-siblings and experiences different cultures.

It's apparent that being abandoned by his mother and seeing his aunt raped has psychologically affected Alfred, and I imagine the reader is supposed to take inferences as to how her father and his lifestyle affects the choices Carmen makes throughout her entire life.

This reader could never make that connection. The author seemed to develop a plot thread - an abusive relationship for Carmen, the "disappeared" in Argentina, and later Carmen's anxiety about her husband's fidelity, and then have them peter out.

Alfred's interest in caving and Carmen choosing to study the mating habits of little-known creatures is examined at some length, likely for metaphoric effect that again did not resonate with this reader.

The characters were unsympathetic and considering the book's title the story had a distinct lack of passion.

In the end, The Continuation of Love by Other Means is a tepid tale of a father and daughter relationship.
… (mehr)
 
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RodRaglin | Mar 31, 2016 |
a very good read
 
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bhowell | Apr 30, 2008 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
3
Mitglieder
135
Beliebtheit
#150,831
Bewertung
½ 3.5
Rezensionen
4
ISBNs
12
Favoriten
1

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