Search Books
Waste-to-Energy: Technologi… Making Work Work: The Posit…

The Secret of Raven Point: A Novel

Author Jennifer Vanderbes
Publisher Scribner
Category BUSINESS & ECONOMICS
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
19.71 26.00 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $2.04

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
PublisherScribner
ISBN / ASIN1439167001
ISBN-139781439167007
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank586,365
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Amazon Guest Review of The Secret of Raven Point

By Matthew Pearl

The plot alone of Jennifer Vanderbes's The Secret of Raven Point is a grabber, though it is just the beginning of the novel's strengths. Set during WWII, a young woman discovers that her enlisted brother has disappeared under mysterious circumstances. Her desire to be part of the war effort and, at a deeper and more dangerous level, her will to find out what happened to her brother, leads her to volunteer as a nurse, giving us a rare perspective on the horrors and triumphs of war as she is sent to the Italian front. One of the usual challenges of placing fiction in a historical setting is how to maintain just the right touch, the interplay of a distant time and the private immediacy of characters we care about. This is what reels me into The Secret of Raven Point so thoroughly, making the big and important geopolitical events surrounding Vanderbes’s characters feel just as reachable and fresh as the very personal search on which the heroine Juliet embarks.

The elements that let you sink into the book are so well-balanced here. There's romance without being mawkish; there's real drama without being melodrama; and there's danger and suspense without ever feeling contrived. In many traditional depictions of World War II, we receive big panoramas of major battles; part of the interest Vanderbes skillfully creates comes by pushing the battles aside and leading us through the battle fatigues, the mental and physical injuries and the caretakers' traumas that make the hospital camps such fascinating subjects.

As a young woman sorting through the lives of the soldiers left behind as the war marches forward, Juliet never feels like an easy stand-in for the reader transported to WWII for the benefit of the story; she has a full force of life to her and that makes us invested in the secrets she chases. She adjusts and changes as the events of history do. One can think of this novel as having a parallel structure that is crafted by the heroine and the author; as Juliet peels back the layers of narrative around her brother's disappearance, Vanderbes builds the layers of the book. An equally fascinating aspect of the story revolves around Barnaby, a wounded soldier with whom Juliet forms a unique bond that could hold the key to her search. Again, he is not the typical figure of war. He is a complicated outcast who has felt the brunt of the accumulated cruelties of the battlefield and has been punished for it. Vanderbes is a great writer, at the level of words and the larger span of a compelling story, another reason The Secret of Raven Point is such a memorable novel that can be enjoyed in countless ways.

Burton's Legal Thesaurus, Fourth Edition
View
Security and Loss Prevention: An Introduction
View
Handbook of Organizational Creativity
View
Energy Efficiency: Towards the End of Demand Growth
View
Neuroeconomics, Second Edition: Decision Making and th…
View
Agriculture's Ethical Horizon, Second Edition (Elsevie…
View
The Economics of Immigration: Market-Based Approaches,…
View
Disruptive Power: The Crisis of the State in the Digit…
View
Understanding Mergers and Acquisitions in the 21st Cen…
View
Minimum Income Protection in Flux (Work and Welfare in…
View