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Saints for All Occasions: A novel (Vintage…
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Saints for All Occasions: A novel (Vintage Contemporaries) (Original 2017; 2018. Auflage)

von J. Courtney Sullivan (Autor)

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
6603334,806 (3.81)19
"A sweeping novel about two sisters--one the matriarch of a boisterous Irish Catholic family, the other a cloistered nun, hidden from the world--and the secret that drove them apart"--
Mitglied:NanaCC
Titel:Saints for All Occasions: A novel (Vintage Contemporaries)
Autoren:J. Courtney Sullivan (Autor)
Info:Vintage (2018), Edition: Reprint, 432 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
Bewertung:
Tags:Kindle, Read 2021

Werk-Informationen

Saints for All Occasions von J. Courtney Sullivan (2017)

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Irish Catholic family drama with focus on the relationship between two sisters. I'm not sure how much you'd appreciate this if you don't come from this family background yourself but for me it all rings quite true.

Zoomed right through it. ( )
  hmonkeyreads | Jan 25, 2024 |
Read for my book club. In short, tedious. I get things were different in the 50s and I get that I'm not female and a lot of the issues in the story were female-centric. But I hate stories about secrets that are religious and cultural shaming. It was just one scene after another of people who were pointlessly confused by Nora's sad life. It didn't go anywhere useful. The characters didn't grow in any useful way. They just kept going nowhere for decades. A thoroughly useless story.

The writing itself was ok and I'll share one sentence that I wanted to remember (page 274 hardcopy): "Her secret was like a diamond long buried kept under pressure then dug up and made into something so much more valuable than the thing it was to begin with."

A couple of notes from other reviews to share with my book club:

- Nora: seriously unlikeable, uninteresting, boring, cold hearted. None of the characters are very likeable, especially Nora, whose children suffer because of her. A saga of a sad insecure woman who negatively affected several generations of her family

- The most stereotypical depiction of a lesbian I've ever read. I was waiting for the author to say that Bridget was blasting Indigo Girls on the way to the house.

- The only part I found interesting was Theresa's journey to becoming a nun. I could have read more about that. I learned a bit from that. Everything else made me want to bang my head against the wall.

- Loved the first section of Nora's and Theresa's immigration. It built up some grand issues, then the book went crosswise. Character stories were all over the place, political/social commentary that was distracting and brought nothing positive to the story, details were either irrelevant or missing, no character development, etc. Started out great and then became a horribly boring, convoluted read.

( )
  donwon | Jan 22, 2024 |
Such a fantastic book! As an Irish Catholic myself, this book reminded me so much of my family history, and also, the pluses and minuses of the church.

The author did a fantastic job of layering the story of family intricacies, the love, jealousy, insecurity, and challenges we all face.

It's a book I highly recommend! ( )
  JillHannah | Nov 20, 2023 |
A book both sad and hopeful. The story follows two sisters who migrate from Ireland to Boston in the mid-20th century, and how the choices they make echo into future generations.

Once in Boston, the two sisters take dramatically different paths - one goes through with a pre-arranged marriage, and the other while more free-spirited takes some unexpected twists and turns. ( )
  sriddell | Aug 6, 2022 |
Family Feud

If you grew up in a family of size, and particularly one with roots in the old country, you appreciate how seemingly small slights can set off a feud lasting years. And family gatherings, oh boy, sometimes they could get, well, explosive. Better to look in on somebody else’s family feud, like Courtney Sullivan’s Irish clan of Rafferty-Flynn.

It boils down to an incident, a very big incident, between the two Flynn sisters, Nora and Theresa. Their family ships them off to America in the late 50s, to Boston and the Irish enclave there. Nora is the older; Theresa the younger. Nora is solid, formal, old Irish to her marrow. Theresa is younger, a teen, impetuous by the standards of the day and the isle they hail from. The idea upon emigrating was for Nora to marry Charlie Rafferty, who preceded her. It almost doesn’t happen, until Theresa gets herself into “trouble,” code of the day for pregnant outside marriage. Then Nora, the responsible one to her own mind, has to hatch a plan. The plan involves taking Theresa’s burden entirely onto herself. Thus, her life in American begins with a lie and a secret that goes on and on, affecting her own family in subtle ways (though among the young, nobody knows Nora has a sister, and that Patrick is not of her issue).

Theresa flees, apparently because she is the irresponsible one. But not really, because the pain of watching Nora raises her baby named Patrick (as well as has and brings up three of her own) is just too painful. She knocks about for a while in New York, and eventually finds solace in her Catholic religion, specifically as a cloistered nun. Thus, she and Nora disappear from each other’s life. Until years later, in 2009, when Patrick dies in single car accident, drunk at the wheel, the opening of the novel.

The story alternates from present to past, back and forth, as well as from character to character, these being the Rafferty children as middle-aged adults, John, Bridget, and Brian. Really, though, it’s Nora’s tale and how she relates to her sister over the years. True, they have little contact, but, as Sullivan clearly portrays, you carry people around with you, in your head and your heart, what you loved about them, your points of resentment and anger, your turmoil over either reconciling or not. And further, how even the closest of people, as Nora and Theresa were in their youth, can never really know what the other thinks or feels, and certainly not when you erect barriers, as Nora does.

Overall, you’ll find this an often engrossing tale of family life of the type that is all but vanishing from the American scene but for immigrant groups, like the Rafferty-Flynns. If you’re from a family of any size, you’ll probably see bits of yourself and your siblings on these pages. There’s much here that will resonate with people, like Charlie and Nora’s frugality for one. “Sixteen dollars for a margarita! I can’t get over it,” shouts Charlie, days after their son John takes them to a fancy beach restaurant. Oh, boy, hear you brother. ( )
  write-review | Nov 4, 2021 |
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For Jenny Jackson, Brettne Bloom, and Ann Napolitano, who kept the faith
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In the car on the way to the hospital , Nora remembered how, when Patrick was small, she would wake up suddenly, gripped by some terrible fear--that he had stopped breathing, or spiked a fever.
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Aunt Nellie just shrugged and said, "Live long enough, and life teaches you that God is not your lucky rabbit's foot."
An aunt could see you as you were.  A mother could only see you as she wished you were, or once imagined you would be.
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"A sweeping novel about two sisters--one the matriarch of a boisterous Irish Catholic family, the other a cloistered nun, hidden from the world--and the secret that drove them apart"--

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