Kamis, 13 Juni 2013

Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook

Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook

The here and now book Monday, Monday: A Novel, By Elizabeth Crook we provide right here is not kind of usual book. You know, reading currently does not mean to handle the printed book Monday, Monday: A Novel, By Elizabeth Crook in your hand. You could obtain the soft data of Monday, Monday: A Novel, By Elizabeth Crook in your gizmo. Well, we suggest that the book that we extend is the soft documents of guide Monday, Monday: A Novel, By Elizabeth Crook The material and all things are very same. The distinction is just the types of the book Monday, Monday: A Novel, By Elizabeth Crook, whereas, this problem will exactly be profitable.

Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook

Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook



Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook

Download Ebook Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook

Winner of the Texas Institute of Letters' Jesse H. Jones Award for Best Work of FictionOne of Kirkus Reviews' Best Fiction Books of the Year and a Wall Street Journal Favorite Book of the Year

On an oppressively hot Monday in August of 1966, a student and former marine named Charles Whitman hauled a footlocker of guns to the top of the University of Texas tower and began firing on pedestrians below. Monday, Monday follows three students caught up in the massacre: Shelly, who leaves class and walks directly into the path of the bullets, and two cousins, Wyatt and Jack, who heroically rush from their classrooms to help the victims.

This searing day marks the beginning of a relationship that will entangle these three young people in a forbidden love affair, an illicit pregnancy, and a vow of silence that will span forty years. Reunited decades after the tragedy, Shelly, Wyatt, and Jack will be thrown back once more to the event that changed their lives, and confronted with the lingering power of a secret none of them are ready to reveal. With Monday, Monday, "Elizabeth Crook has written an extraordinary novel-an eloquent love story born from an act of random violence, a tale of destruction and redemption" (Sarah Bird).

Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #356845 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-09-15
  • Released on: 2015-09-15
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.66" h x 1.00" w x 5.58" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 352 pages
Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook

From Booklist This intense novel opens with a horrific scene depicting one of the first mass shootings in U.S. history, when Charles Whitman killed 17 students at the University of Texas at Austin in 1966. Shelly, a freshman, is grievously wounded by the sniper’s bullet and convinced she will bleed out on the searing concrete plaza, where she lies surrounded by the dead. But two cousins, Jack and Wyatt, come to her rescue. That singular, surreal encounter binds them together over decades as Shelly and the married Wyatt engage in a profound and passionate love affair, which produces a child. Jack and his wife adopt the child and generously welcome Shelly into their lives, while Wyatt moves to Provincetown, where his art career takes off. Even as Shelly finds love again with a smart and generous man, she is still tethered to her firstborn child and haunted by her secret love affair. Although the plot of Crook’s fourth novel (after The Night Journal, 2007) sometimes loses its way after its potent opening, overall this is a vivid portrayal of resolve in the face of great tragedy. --Joanne Wilkinson

Review

“This rapturous novel starts with one of the most heinous shootings in history, yet every page shines with life. Crook follows three students who endured the tragedy as they grapple with the past, struggle to navigate their futures, and discover that who and what saves us is nothing like what you imagine. Brilliantly realized and so vivid the novel seems to virtually breathe, Monday, Monday is a stunning achievement.” ―Caroline Leavitt, New York Times bestselling author of Is This Tomorrow and Pictures of You

“[E]loquent. . . Monday, Monday opens with a random, hideous act, but thankfully the novel isn't about that moment or the gunman. The shooting sets in motion an entire lifetime of relationships; from an act of violence springs love, friendship, loss, forgiveness and survival. . . Crook's writing shimmers with life. . . [The story] explores the complex messiness of being human and the ways in which even the best intentions can create consequences both hurtful and beautiful. It's intense and emotional, but never maudlin. . . The scenery looms large, but this is story painted on a canvas much larger than the state. Crook has created a gorgeous, worthy and entirely believable read.” ―San Antonio Express-News

“[Monday, Monday] is rich in detail and grand in scope. . . the emotional journey shown in the novel remains honest, and deeply human.” ―Bustle

“Authentic. . . harrowing. . . makes us believe the characters were there. . . Crook's exploration of Whitman's massacre and its lingering effects will have relevance for years to come.” ―Dallas Morning News

“This is a vivid portrayal of resolve in the face of great tragedy.” ―Booklist

“Framing a story in the context of calamity--in this instance, mass murder--invites both sensationalism and sentimentality; there have been few memorable successes, Jonathan Safran Foer's Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close and Wally Lamb's The Hour I First Believed among them. Add Crook's latest to the plus side of the list….confident and lyrical as it smartly engages terror and its aftermath.” ―Kirkus (starred review)

“Love, loss, redemption, forgiveness--all are expertly drawn in a narrative that is so very authentic and generous. Crook skillfully weaves together several compelling stories through her close attention to the Texas setting. VERDICT The sensitively explored themes of adoption and coping with violence should create interest in this rich and satisfying tale.” ―Library Journal

“The tale unwinds like an examination of the ripple effect. . . As readers, we have the benefit of sitting in the sand and watching them break on the shoreline. . . This story is the antithesis to the diagram published in the pages of Time magazine shortly after the shooting. Crook forsakes the aerial view and brings your cheek right on down to the scalding pavement.” ―Austin Chronicle

“[An] intensely imagined novel. . . The story unfurls simply and smoothly, with a quiet insistence much like the path the characters will take. Crook renders Shelly's interior life delicately and fully, and artfully conveys her many moments of panic and anguish.” ―Publishers Weekly

“Beautifully written. . . The book is a complex tale about overcoming fear and the risks and power of love. . . And it is the story of the compromises we all make to get by in this imperfect world. Part of what makes this book so compelling is the open and tender way each character is honestly but lovingly portrayed. . . A wonderful book that will make you cry, but also uplift you.” ―BookPage

“Elizabeth Crook has written an extraordinary novel--an eloquent love story born from an act of random violence, a tale of destruction and redemption. It's about making a whole life out of a damaged one, and about holding on and letting go. The characters are as real as people you know; their story is subtle, startling, and wise.” ―SARAH BIRD, author of The Yokota Officers Club and Above the East China Sea

“Monday, Monday begins by throwing us into the midst of one of the worst mass murders in American history, a scene painted with such harrowing exactitude that it leaves you wondering how the characters can possibly survive and how the author can possibly sustain such a high level of narrative momentum and emotional insight. And yet Elizabeth Crook pulls it off. This is a brilliant and beautiful book.” ―STEPHEN HARRIGAN, author of The Gates of the Alamo and Remember Ben Clayton

“In Monday, Monday, Elizabeth Crook uses vivid, gripping prose and in-depth historical research to shed light on one of the darkest moments in Texas history... by detailing the fictional lives of three survivors caught in the crosshairs.” ―The Rivard Report

About the Author

Elizabeth Crook is the author of three previous novels. Her most recent, The Night Journal, won a Spur Award from Western Writers of America and a WILLA Literary Award from Women Writing the West. She has written for magazines and periodicals, including Texas Monthly and the Southwestern Historical Quarterly. She lives in Austin with her family.


Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook

Where to Download Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook

Most helpful customer reviews

19 of 20 people found the following review helpful. Resilience By Free2Read MONDAY, MONDAY by Elizabeth Crook says right on the cover, "a novel." So I don't know why I expected a sort of true-crime look at the Texas Tower shooter of 1966.The first chapter opens with the shooting, with the focus on three specific victims. As the story progresses, we are swept into Shelly's life. She has survived the shooting, but she has been physically and emotionally changed by the event. Her rescuers, Wyatt and Jack,are also forever changed.We follow these three as they move through their lives, post-trauma. It is hard to throw off the nightmares caused by that day. It is hard to trust others to talk to freely. It is hard to be around people who don't know whether to mention the shooting or pretend it didn't happen.Years go by. A love affair begins. A love affair ends. But a baby is born. She means the world to her adoptive parents. She means the world to the mother who decided to give her away. More years pass, and there are highs and lows, doubts, recriminations, what if's. Crook takes us into the heart of not only the three main characters but of the ancillary characters as well. Secrets beget distrust. Wyatt, Jack, and Shelly find that keeping mum about their lives does not work very well when the new generation begins asking questions.Elizabeth Crook makes every incident and every moment fraught with emotion. The characters do enjoy happy times, but they carry a burden of survivor's guilt and a burden of their own decisions about their lives.MONDAY, MONDAY is a page-turner with an inciting incident drenched in blood and pain. The books tells truths of the human condition without putting rose-colored glasses on the reader's perceptions. A deeply felt and amazing read.

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful. Brilliant Account of a Mass Shooting By asiana With all of the mass shootings which have occurred within the last few years, many do not remember the massacre which took place in August, 1961 when Charles Whitman, a former Marine, stood at the top of the University of Texas Tower and started to shoot at those below. When he finished, there were 16 people dead and 32 wounded.This fictional account of the tragedy follows the lives of three of the victims: Shelly, an average girl who was shot while going to a drugstore and two cousins, Jack and Wyatt, who rushed to save her, Jack being seriously injured. Their emotional and physical lives are forever linked over a 40 year span including happiness, tragedy and secrets. The book has an incredible amount of detail and the research makes Texas "come alive." I would recommend this to those who enjoy historical fiction.

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. I Remember the Shooting .... By Ms Winston MINOR SPOILER I think "Monday Monday" has a great deal to offer readers -- even the ones who are not old enough to remember the day that Charles Whitman climbed to the top of the Tower at the University of Texas at Austin and shot 17 people to death. As the front piece in the ARC I read remind us, it was the first mass shooting at a campus in our history. Now, unfortunately, school shootings all the way down to the elementary school level have become more and more common, but they still have the power to shock and horrify us.In her novel about the shooting and its aftermath, author Elizabeth Crook follows the lives of three students who survive and whose lives are forever complicated over a 40 year period. Shelly, Wyatt, and Jack (the latter two being cousins) go though many life-altering events, including an unwanted pregnancy that estranges Shelly from her parents and complicates the relationship with the two cousins. The dialog is well written and realistic, as are descriptive passages, particularly the shooting itself.The voices of the characters can be heard clearly and they are true individuals, and not just place holders in the story. At the end, without giving the resolution of the threads of the story away, Shelly goes back to the University and spends time musing about the day that everything changed for her, Wyatt, Jack, the 17 dead and the 32 wounded, and Whitman himself. Taken with the rest of the story, it is a resolution of sorts where Shelly makes a type of peace with her past. Very touching, and it reminds us that years later these types of acts still resonate with the survivors.

See all 122 customer reviews... Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook


Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook PDF
Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook iBooks
Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook ePub
Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook rtf
Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook AZW
Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook Kindle

Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook

Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook

Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook
Monday, Monday: A Novel, by Elizabeth Crook

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar