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Crackpots de Sara Pritchard

de Sara Pritchard - Género: English
libro gratis Crackpots

Sinopsis

When we first meet Ruby Reese she’s a spunky kid in a cowgirl hat, tap dancing her way through a slightly off-kilter 1950s childhood. With an insomniac mother and a demolitions-expert father, her entire family is what the residents of her small town would call "a bunch of crackpots." Despite the dramas of her upbringing, Ruby matures into a creative, introspective, and wholly beguiling woman. But her adulthood is marked by complex relationships and romantic missteps — three unsuitable marriages, dramatic crushes, the complicated love between siblings. As Sara Pritchard deftly guides us through Ruby's story, from the present to the past and back again, a portrait of a remarkably resilient woman emerges. Suffused with humor and melancholy, imagination and insight, Crackpots heralds the debut of a skilled and sensitive storyteller.


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Such an in depth look at a childhood, with non-linear storytelling that is as engaging as it is fantastic.

Pritchard's most compelling work is full of surprises as well as emotion, and every reader should find more than one element to recognize and cling to.4 s Beth104 6

I really enjoyed most of this book. It is chock full of some of the best similes I have ever read. If you do not know what a simile is you should upon finishing this book. Highly readable, funny and tragic, it did lose me in the end. 1 Ginger MarcinkowskiAuthor 5 books20

A wonderful read. Ms. Pritchard really knows how to make the ordinary, extraordinary!1 Roxie127 10

“Behind Ruby’s heart, on a three-legged stool, sits a terrified little monkey, reading the funnies. Every now and then, the monkey gets up and whispers something in Ruby’s ear.”

This book is a really good album, maybe “Rumours” or “Rubber Soul,” where every song stands alone but they also come together lightning in a bottle. Some of the lines and images in this book are firecrackers that just hit you with how beautiful and insightful and intelligent (and funny) they are. To carry forward the album simile, parts of this book are more B-sides... but overall this little book contained some of my favorite images and arrangements of words in recent reading.

Jessica Rosner489 8

A strange and often beautiful slim novel about the life and times of Ruby. There is some chronology but every so often skips years forward and back.
The author fills pages with bits of real songs that were important to her. Ruby is a bit of a strong but lost soul and in her words has a passive life, allowing her to ride out one wave after the next till she lands in the shallow and waits for the next wave. DavidAuthor 12 books144

There’s a lot here. Sometimes I could miss the connections between leaps because I got bogged in a lengthy series of details, but things were magical when they worked. Loved the characters and the things the book built from the links. Wished I hadn’t missed things from getting list, but I put that down to me not working harder. Agnes Muscoreil1,249 13

This was a fun romp through the life of a lady, with lots of laughter, sadness and everything in between! Kept my head spinning, I loved Ruby. . Amy360 5

Laugh out loud funny is parts. I found it a bit difficult to get through because it jumps around in time and geography but worth sticking it out. Bonnie1,347

Lovely writing, a little unusual (always good) a little off kilter, breathtaking at times, achingly real. I look forward to more books from this author. LOVED the front cover, how could you not buy that book...
Now that this book had me awake half the night thinking and processing it, I thought I'd add: I love how many "writing rules" she broke writing this book. She would not receive a "good" grade from most professors but then there is that question, "can you teach writing?"
The stories are hilariously real to cutting to the bone real.
She changes POV (which I to do in a story but in a writing class it gets your knuckles injured.) I don't mind a change of POV once in a while, as long as it's a new chapter, I'm smart enough to figure out who's speaking given a few clues. (If I wrote a story about myself, it would be interesting to have my mother say a few words.)
This book is truely haunting, it's made up of flashes of light, moments in time. It doesn't go into great detail, we are left to "get the picture" more than once. It just proves a book doesn't have to go on for 700 pages to get to a point and I love brevity in writing, especially good writing. Thanks for a great book. Patricia385 47

I bought this book after hearing the author's reading at a salon for the Wilkes University MA/MFA in Creative Writing residency in June, 2016. Sara Pritchard's alternatively sweet and snarky, high-pitched delivery completely disarmed me as she read an anecdote about a date who took her surfing only to find that she was terrified of water and could not swim.
Crackpots, a novel which I can only assume is based on the author's experiences, is similarly filled with vivid, off-beat characters. The protagonist is Ruby, whom we meet as a small child in red cowboy boots and hat and holsters. Her father is a demolitions expert and her mother is a piano teacher, and snatches of music from those days and the grand piano itself anchor the dream sequences and manic occurrences. Ruby's family is described by observers as a "bunch of crackpots," and as she makes her timid, vivid way through childhood,
schooling, and three marriages, she remains child and impulsive, often retreating beneath beds, pianos, and tables.
Her prose is witty and bright, with sudden detours into sensuality or fascinating details, before whisking away into self-destruction or escapism. It's a quirky piece of fiction, but it rings true.
reviewed Nancy889

I had high hopes for this book, but it let me down.
It had its moments, but for the most part the story meandered too much and was too disjointed/disorganized, which was a waste because there was so much potential. It would be really great and compelling for a bit, but it couldn't be sustained for long, and then would revert to dull and plodding nonsense. Parts of it were excellent, but overall it was inconsistent.
It didn't help that Ruby ended up being not very likable, which was too bad, because as a child she was so quirky, weird and sweet that I was really looking forward to reading about/getting to know adult Ruby. I definitely enjoyed the childhood Ruby parts of the story more than the adult Ruby.

By the end it really fell apart, and it probably should have ended at least 20 pages or so sooner than it did.
Oh well. I had been wanting to read this for a while, since it first appeared on my radar, because something about it really appealed to me. So now I know. It's not the worst book ever, just not that great. And I still the cover. Susan47 6

Objectively speaking, this was a very well-written novel. Sensitive. Insightful. Eloquent. Still, though I found Ruby Reese to be a very fascinating and likable character, I got a little depressed endlessly wallowing in the melancholy details of her life, what with the string of doomed romantic relationships and personal losses. ..but that's just me. What IS cool is the way she presents the story as if looking down on a time-line of her life, and the time-line is a jigsaw puzzle that is being put together piece by piece in beautifully disjointed fashion, leaving the reader with a view of time that's less a vast ocean, more an intricate web. Somewhat similar in this regard to 'The Time-Traveler's Wife'...perhaps if it had been written by Sylvia Plath. Winner of the 2002 Bakeless Prize for fiction. ..whatever that is. Ted Burke158 22

Brief, beautifully written book about an awkward young girl being raised by an eccentric family. Note that there is no child abuse or other hot button stuff engineered in to make the book appeal to the Oprah book clubs, just a humorous and bittersweet novel of a girl, beset with any number of glum circumstances and embarrassments, maturing to a resilient adult with soft irony that gets her through the day. Pritchard is especially fine as prose stylist.

Nicole | msheldabook264

I gave Crackpots three stars, not because I didn't it, but because it was a book I really had to think about. It wasn't the good quick summer read I was hoping for, but it was still a good book, none-the-less.

It jumps from different time periods making it slightly hard for me to keep straight. It was a book full of inside jokes and weird animals I wasn't quite getting into (I attributed it to the parts of West Virginia I didn't get to know in the four years I was there).adult historical-fiction humor ...more Agnes1,472 1 follower

Very strange story. Kept jumping around in time, from childhood to present to early adult; confusing. Crazy family, with main character being craziest. Was interested in location of story: central Pennsylvania and West Virginia, so some locations were familiar to me.
Don't know that I wuld recommend to anyone. Was winner of Bakeless Prize at the Breadloaf Writiers Conference????????

Vicki6 4

An amazing book that uses a non-linear storyline to tell the story of a family of wonderful, zany characters. Sad and heartwrenching and often hysterically funny, Sara Pritchard is a writer to be experienced and admired. And not to be missed is her delightful use of the family's dogs as real characters in the book's plotline. Tana Wood12 2

I really enjoyed the prose style of this author. She writes with a lyrical, poetic style that resounds with allusions and literary references. As a psueo-memoir, it was relevant and quirky enough to keep me reading.fiction Kori55

I really love Sara Pritchard - both the author and the lovely, lovely person I've gotten to know as a part of West Virginia University's M.F.A. program. This book is a delight - not just Ruby, but every character, is marvelously well drawn. Great stuff! Karen72

A little less spunky than the publisher's blurb implies, and a little more tragic-comic. Recommended read for the stellar writing and exquisite imagery. Loved loved loved the story of Ruby's painful visit to the Swedish aunt and her TV-watching dog, Igor. RachaelAuthor 1 book8

What a fantastic adventure! This book will hook your interest immediately and keep you fully engorged in a world of colorful characters and vivid imagery. I can't wait to read more from this author!fiction wilkes Erica377 4

I can't remember whether I read a review of this, or if it was a "library shelf proximity find." A quirky read -- that's really all I remember.fiction Aubrey11 1 followerRead

i lurve her!mid-way-through Patricia627 9

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