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The Imposter Bride

von Nancy Richler

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4263658,776 (3.54)56
A novel about a mysterious mail-order bride in the wake of World War II, whose sudden decision ripples through time to deeply impact the daughter she never knew.
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Family Drama
  BooksInMirror | Feb 19, 2024 |
Starts off a bit slow but calmly picks up momentum. Some chapters are first person, Ruth, others are flashbacks to the "original" story in which POV shifts between paragraphs. In this way the whole story unveils itself. The imposter bride leaves her new husband and baby behind and the close knit family raises Ruth. I'm sorry that Elka did not have more of a voice in the latter half. Her transition from young woman to motherly wife was not evident, but her role was important. A nice story with all other loose ends tied up.
  LDVoorberg | Dec 24, 2023 |
Intriguing premise, not well executed. The book just dragged, I found myself skimming even though I am trying to read slower than usual to make my summer stack of books last longer! The story could have been more interesting, the dialogue did not feel realistic, especially when immigrants give long passages of speech in perfect, highly literate English, and most of the story was told thru the perspective of a very dull young girl.I did not find the characters fully realized, and telling me over and over that a young girl has a crush on a boy, without ever making me understand why made me feel that the author presumed that I knew him and would "just understand"... There was a lot of repetition, and the name dropping of places in Montreal was fun for me as an ex-Montrealer, but might leave those not familiar with the city wondering why one restaurant or street is different from another. The characters would do/think/see something that I felt would change the direction of their life, make it more interesting, and then that thread would be dropped. It really felt like the author had reread her childhood diaries (crushes, incidents with best friends, first contact with anti-semitism, dates, spending time with her aunt/cousins) and then incorporated another story ( a refugee's assumed identity after the war) around her childhood. Finally, the ending felt thin and hollow. ( )
  Rdra1962 | Aug 1, 2018 |
While this story of a Jewish woman who escapes to America under a false name could have been an interesting one, it fell a little short for me. I wanted to know more about the main character Lily but it just wasn't provided. Perhaps that was to make the reader identify with her daughter who was also in the dark about her mother and her motives? Not sure but I think it would have been a better read if we had more about the missing woman. I also found the book confusing at points when it changed point of view in mid stream. Sometimes I had to go back and read things twice. I like it but didn't love it. ( )
  tinkerbellkk | Jul 24, 2017 |
This book made me imagine that author Nancy Richler, who writes beautiful prose, went to a writer's workshop one day and was asked to write something about a child being abandoned by a parent. When she submitted the original, the story of Ruth and her mother Lily, the instructor was rightly impressed, and suggested that she write the story from another character's point of view. This process might have been repeated until Richler decided to put all the parts together. This is just my imagination, but it demonstrates what the novel felt like to me. The connection between the various characters was there, but very fragile. There were too many chapters where the reader is asked to start over in order to determine who the narrator is, where in the world the action is occurring, and when it's taking place. Yes, it all fits, but it takes work to follow it from chapter to chapter and it detracts from the beautiful prose. ( )
1 abstimmen lansum | Jan 18, 2017 |
The Imposter Bride is in many ways a mystery novel; the question of who Ruth’s mother actually is propels the narrative as pieces of her story are slowly revealed. In this vein, it is successful, leaving the reader hanging until near the end. But this book has far greater ambitions. It attempts to explore the process and necessity of unearthing the hidden parts of ourselves that lie buried in the traumas of the past — a past that often long precedes our existence. This is a deep and vast theme. One wishes Richler had ventured into it with less caution, giving readers the opportunity to view her characters in a more varied light than their good intentions and innocence suggest. In a realm of moral ambiguity, the full breadth and nuance of this sweeping narrative may fully come to life.
 
Finally, Richler is back, and with an elegant, ambitious, accomplished new work. The Imposter Bride elaborates Richler’s essential themes: Jewish history, maternal absence, female experience and the significance of the word. ...For those of us who are not children of survivors (I’m not), but who have friends who are (I do), and who have wondered (as I have) how a devastated Jewish family moves forward in faith and love and grace, this novel serves as a gut-wrenching education.
 
And yet, there is also something compelling about the saga Richler creates. We want to know each character’s history. Who is Lily, really? Why did she leave? Will Ruth ever find her? And what’s up with the rocks? There are many plot elements and scenes that could easily be deleted without detracting from the overall fabric of the narrative, but we are able to forgive these asides because, in the end, Richler manages to make us care about her vast catalogue of broken souls, even in their most trivial moments.
 

» Andere Autoren hinzufügen

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Nancy RichlerHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Gilbert, TaviaErzählerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
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You whom I could not save/Listen to me./Try to understand this simple speech as I would be ashamed of another./I swear, there is in me no wizardry of words./I speak to you with silence like a cloud or a tree -- Czeslaw Milosz, "Dedication", Warsaw, 1945
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For Janet and Martin. And for Vicki.
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In a small room off a banquet hall in Montreal, Lily Karmer sat in silence with her new husband.
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A novel about a mysterious mail-order bride in the wake of World War II, whose sudden decision ripples through time to deeply impact the daughter she never knew.

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