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Liza GyllenhaalRezensionen

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This was my first book by Lisa and look forward to reading her previous books. She does an outstanding job of setting up the characters and this small town where you get to know all the players and setting.

First, the front cover is a huge draw as with the snow setting which is very inviting.This novel is for parents as well as teens. This is a reminder parents do not always know their teens as well as they think they do. Teens also need to be reminded their actions have consequences which can affect many people. A story of lies and cover ups, and secrets from the privileged and wealthy to the poor.
 
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JudithDCollins | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 27, 2014 |
“A Place for Us” by Liza Gyllenhaal is a story of every parent’s nightmare. The Bostocks are a family for whom everything has gone right. They are a privileged family and are well liked in their small town. Brook is from a wealthy family. She married her sweetheart and they have two children. Her son is in college and her daughter is a busy ten-year-old.

All seems to be going well for them until a drinking episode with minors and an assault that happened in their house promises to become a national scandal. This story is about the children involved and what happens to them during the height of the storm of repercussions. This is the story of a family trying to hang on to their love and respect for each other.

I would recommend book, but for me it was such a sad story. I would not want to read it again, nor would I want to read something like it. It was well written, but such a downer. I received a free print copy of this book in return for my honest review from the publisher, Penguin Group and Night Owl Reviews. The opinions expressed here are my own.

You can read this review on my blog at http://wp.me/p2pjIt-5x
 
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SilverShrew | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 20, 2014 |
Real estate in small towns a stone's throw from the city is attractive to those looking for weekend houses. Maddie is a local realtor who depends on the weekenders for her bread and butter; her friend Luke resents them for destroying the land that made the location wonderful in the first place. How land is used is a deep subject which Gyllenhaal mines well. She is very familiar with the small town where the action takes place, and creates a convincing set of characters and situations. The way family predetermines your fate -- the events, the resentments, the petty feuds and tragic rifts-- these are all described in a way anyone could relate to. I especially liked the way the vulgar businessman befriends the police who he can use for his own agenda.
 
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paakre | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 27, 2013 |
A PLACE FOR US by Lisa Gyllenhaal is an interesting Women's fiction/Psychological fiction set in a small Massachusetts town. It is told in four parts from the point of view of four characters,two of which are teenagers. Intertwined with underage drinking,tragedy,secrets,physical abuse,longing to belong,and the lies that can tear apart a family as well as a small close knit town. Written about complex social issues,as well as small towns,very compassionate and realistic. A very compelling,gripping story from the start to the last page. "A Place For Us" is a complex story that grips you from the start and holds you there. If you enjoy Women's Fiction,and Social issue reads than this is a story for you. But be aware you may need a tissue or two. Received for an honest review from the publisher.

RATING:4

HEAT RATING: SWEET

REVIEWED BY: AprilR, My Book Addiction Reviews
 
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MyBookAddiction | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 22, 2013 |
As I started to read this novel about consequences, poor decisions and impulse control, I wanted to reach into the book and smack the characters. Instead I was reduced to muttering under my breath about the ridiculous, self-centered stupidity of teenagers. Liza Gyllenhaal's novel A Place for Us tackles a difficult time in parents' lives and an equally emotionally fraught time in kids' lives and explores what happens when things careen out of control.


Brook and Michael Bostock appear to have it all. Brook is an heiress so money is no problem for their family but she also runs the very successful event planning business RSVP with an old college friend. Michael makes exquisite custom wood furniture that commands top dollar. They chose to move their family back to the small Massachusetts town where Michael grew up after 9/11 and they built a gorgeous showpiece of a home there. But there are small cracks under the surface. Brook finds out that Michael knew about her money right from their first meeting, leading her to wonder if he only married her for the security of it rather than for herself. Michael's family and almost all of the townspeople have continued to hold the Bostock family at arm's length. And son Liam, who feels this outsider status most of all, started drinking and smoking pot to cope with his loneliness. So Brook and Michael pulled him from the local public school and sent him to a private boarding school in hopes of removing him from his troubles.

At the start of the book, he is coming home from school with his roommate Carey and Carey's older brother, the school hockey star, Brandon. Brook and Michael have hired local teenager Phoebe to babysit daughter Tilly until the boys arrive because they plan on being at a party overnight an hour away. But when the boys come through the door, Brandon and Liam are already drunk and high and when Phoebe, who has long been Liam's only friend and confidante in town and who is secretly in love with him, discovers that he's told Brandon and Carey that they have been having sex for years, she is crushed and angry enough to take the bottle they offer her and get herself drunk too. As if this isn't bad enough, Brandon, who has been given a pass on his behaviour for years and feels entitled to take whatever he wants, tries to rape Phoebe. She escapes him but when her father sees the bruises on her and hears about the sexual assault, he vows to take Liam and the Bostocks to court. Still desperately hurt and angry at Liam, Phoebe doesn't correct her father's impression that it was Liam who attacked her. And when her father Troy, who already has a long and troubled history with Michael Bostock, confronts Michael and Liam, Michael gives Liam the impression that he believes his son capable of this terrible and brutal act so Liam doesn't bother to explain that it wasn't him. And then as things snowball, Liam realizes that protecting Brandon could in fact give him an in and acceptance at school and so he makes the ridiculous conscious decision to protect Brandon.


But Phoebe and Liam aren't the only two who have shown a lapse in judgment over the events this night, Brook and Michael made the mistake of leaving these teenagers at their home without supervision, opening themselves up to the recriminations of the town that has never fully accepted them and to prosecution under the Social Host Liability Statute that holds parents responsible for what happens at their home even when they are not there. As they themselves question their actions, they also second guess their previous decisions, choosing to come back to this town to live, sending Liam away to boarding school, and the way they have ceded control of so much to Brook's disapproving half sisters. They have suffered a fatal lack of confidence in their choices and that, coupled with them feeling isolated from each other and the very family and acquaintances who should have made them feel connected, is as troubling as the law suit threatening the Bostocks. Both Brook and Liam struggle with loneliness and their desire to fit in and Liam faces that most potentially devastating of teenaged problems, peer pressure. A missing sense of belonging and connection not only leads Liam to accept and even embrace the false charges but it makes the isolation Brook feels and tries to ignore that much more difficult to overcome, with her having faked happiness and unconcern for so many years now. It is only through finding out the truth and recognizing the value and importance of a place where they are at home as well as the right way to achieve that place that will give these characters any hope of a happy future.


The novel touches on quite a few issues so terrifying to a parent: underage drinking, sexual assault, depression and suicidal thoughts, and more. The teen years are so chock full of angst, real and manufactured, and it's hard not to want to want to haul both Phoebe and Liam over your knee and spank them for being so willfully stupid. What they each suffer is incredibly real but their lack of emotional control and immaturity is absolutely infuriating. The issues of truth and honesty weave throughout the narrative here. Without the cover-ups and lies and the tacit and outright stated collusion by the adults in their lives, the story would not exist. The inclusion of the controversial but very real Social Host Liability statute makes the legal ramifications of the attack on Phoebe that much more important, regardless of whether Liam is at fault or not. It also makes the ease of the resolution of the story not quite work as the truth of the events of that night (which the reader has known all along) should have no bearing on a court case based on this law. So that was a frustrating and unexplained piece of the plot for me.


Liam and Phoebe as characters are very definitely alternately completely self-absorbed and aware of the damage they are causing. But honestly, they are still more over the top than any of the teenagers I know or have living with me currently. And I had a hard time feeling much sympathy for Brook and Michael, who seemed less interested in getting to the root of Liam's problems than they did about appearances and their own angst and history. As for bad guy Brandon, he's a completely cardboard character although clearly necessary for the pivotal moment in the plot. The narrative pacing waxes and wanes through the storytelling of several of the major characters: Michael, Brook, Liam, and Phoebe, but it does allow the reader to see each of their motivations and the secrets they keep even from those to whom they are closest. There is never any doubt that the truth will out here but the ending came about a bit abruptly and felt summed up rather than brought to a fully realized conclusion. Despite my feelings about the main characters and a major unexplained plot resolution, I found this a speedy read. It had a bit of the same feel of after school special for adults that Jodi Picoult's books have and will definitely appeal to her fans and to those who like those legal grey area stories that inspire such judgment and discussion, both pro and con. A good thought provoking book for book clubs to discuss.
 
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whitreidtan | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 11, 2013 |
This book had various stages of "boringness" where I really hoped it would just end and we could get on with the story. Many of these parts where when the story flashed back to the main characters' (Maddie, Luke, Paul) childhoods. There was a lot of build up in the beginning of the story that really amounted to nothing by the end. I agree with the other reviewer who said the book was hard to get into, because it was. I did persevere to the end, but I don't really think it was worth it.
 
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lfoster82 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 7, 2012 |
The book was very hard to get into. I put it down after about 150 pages.
 
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charlotteg | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 15, 2009 |
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