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Consider This, Senora
Consider This Senora
Author: Harriet Doerr
As she did in Stones for Ibarra Harriet Doerr has created a wise book. The characters find themselves waiting, hoping & living in rural Mexico a land with the power to enchant, repel & change all who pass through. East of the NOrth Americans who settle interacts with the landscape & the Mexican in different ways. But it is Ursula Bowles - bor...  more »
ISBN: 455458
Publication Date: 11/19/1994
Pages: 241
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Harcourt Bruce & Company
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

MyLikeIt avatar reviewed Consider This, Senora on + 450 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
American Book Award-winner (Stones for Ibarra) Doerr examines the lives of a group of American expatriates recently settled in Mexico. With an unfailingly true ear, eye, and voice, Doerr captures the most complex and moving details of Americans in a foreign land.
bup avatar reviewed Consider This, Senora on + 166 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
So I think I like female authors more than the typical male does. Not chick-lit, Dating Big Bird notwithstanding. Female authors have a tendency to write about normalcy, though - things that could happen in unremarkable lives. Or at least have a way of making things feel normal, no matter how strange. I like that.

This book, although it has an actual plot, feels like the recording of a few years of regular lives. And that's cool. I don't know how Doerr did it, making it all feel so normal, especially since there's a very strange death that unfolds, but she did.

And now she's dead. Which just goes to show you.
reviewed Consider This, Senora on + 166 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
'In her customary crystalline prose, Harriet Doerr examines the lives of four North American expatriates in a small Mexican village of a thousand souls. Set on the barren mesa of Amapolas, we see the newcomers settling in their adobe houses and gradually adjusting to an environment of excesses - hot sun, torrential downpour, sweeping landscapes, and a vastness of untouched nature - and watch as each is drawn into the aura of this land and changed.'
reviewed Consider This, Senora on + 28 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Expatriates settle in a Mexican village for a time. Though they seem to try, they do not join in the life of the people--mostly observe the life around them. It is interesting to see the life (and the memories of their pasts) through their eyes. I enjoyed the book.
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