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Sea Glass
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Sea Glass
Author: Anita Shreve

Book Information
Publisher: Back Bay Books
Book Type: Paperback
Rating:

ISBN-13: 9780316089692 - ISBN-10: 0316089699
Publication Date: 1/2003
Pages: 400


Other Versions of this Book: Hardcover, Hardcover, Audio Cassette (Abridged), Audio Cassette (Abridged), Audio CD (Abridged)

Book Description:
With the power and immediacy that have made her previous novels international bestsellers, Anita Shreve unfolds a richly engaging tale of marriage, money, and troubled times: the story of a pair of young newlyweds tugged in opposite directions as they set out to build a life together in a decaying beach house on the Atlantic coast.

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Eden CloseFortune's RocksAll He Ever WantedThe Weight of WaterThe Last Time They Met


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Top Member Book Reviews

Patricia J. wrote on 7/7/2007...

22 member(s) found this review helpful.

Excellent book. One of the few books I could not put down. The characters are well developed and the story comes together so well. I highly recommend this.

Audrey B. wrote on 3/25/2007...

21 member(s) found this review helpful.

It was a beautiful book, and a terriffic summer read a few years back. Every time I hold it, it takes me back to laying on the beach and hunting for my own sea glass.

CS K. (HOHcathy) wrote on 1/18/2007...

20 member(s) found this review helpful.

I was impressed with the imagery in this book. The characters came together very well. The story was good and had a surprise ending...not at all what was expected. The best way to describe it is "pleasant". Good story.

Lynn B. (seraphina) wrote on 3/19/2007...

19 member(s) found this review helpful.

Good Read,Very descriptive. A must read if the depression era intrests you.

Danielle C. wrote on 2/22/2006...

19 member(s) found this review helpful.

What a great read. I had a little trouble ge4tting into the book but when the worlds started to collide I finally got it. A few different lifestyles clash and come together during the Depression and the fall of the stock market. Some lose everything and others never really had anything to begin with.

Honora has just married Sexton Beecher and now this. They have biought a house that ia bout to repossessed because of the bank failures. Sexton must take a job at the mills and this is where things get interesting. Sexton brings home folks for a strike and it turns out Honora knows one of the men. McDermott, she has given him a ride before. He is very smitten with her. They kiss and so on it goes.


Jen S. (jenroseschnaid) wrote on 2/13/2007...

18 member(s) found this review helpful.

Really a great story. i collect sea glass and the title cought my attention. I felt a part of the story from the very beginning. I loved the descriptive writing and could almost smell the ocean.

Kirsten C. wrote on 5/10/2007...

16 member(s) found this review helpful.

This is a great quick weekend read.

Jessica E. wrote on 4/21/2007...

15 member(s) found this review helpful.

A nice, quick, enjoyable read for a lazy weekend afternoon.

Gloria B. wrote on 10/1/2006...

14 member(s) found this review helpful.

Wounderful book, the kind you hate to see end.

Alisa D. (alyza) wrote on 2/9/2007...

13 member(s) found this review helpful.

Really liked it. Liked the historical setting.


Please Rate these Book Reviews

Sharon R. (hazeleyes) wrote on 10/12/2009...


Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
From its opening pages, Anita Shreve's Sea Glass surrounds the reader in the surprisingly rich feeling of the New Hampshire coast in winter. Vividly evoking the life of the coastal community at the beginning of the Great Depression, Sea Glass shifts through the multiple points of view of six principal characters; it's a skillfully created story of braided lives that bounces easily (even inevitably) from character to character. We learn how these lives come together following the stock market crash of 1929 and about the struggles of mill workers on the starkly beautiful New Hampshire coast during the following year. At the novel's center is the story of Honora Beecher, a young newlywed who compulsively collects sea glass along the beach as she collects unexpected friendship in her new beachside community, and Francis, a boy who discovers a father figure in the towering character of McDermott, an Irish mill worker, at a time when he most needs direction. Each character finds unexpected new purpose beyond the struggle to survive during that turbulent year among the dunes. First their lives barely touch, then they intersect, and finally they become inextricably bound. By the powerful and unexpected final scenes of the story, every point of view, every brilliant shard of life depends deeply on all the others. It is a very satisfying read--confidently told and deeply felt--with as many subtle colors and reflections as the sea glass that permeates the narrative. --Paul Ford --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly
In addition to spinning one of her most absorbing narratives, Shreve here rewards readers with the third volume in a trilogy set in the large house on the New Hampshire coast that figured in The Pilot's Wife and Fortune's Rocks. This time the inhabitants are a newly married couple, Sexton and Honora Beecher, both of humble origins, who rent the now derelict house. In a burst of overconfidence, slick typewriter salesman Sexton lies about his finances and arranges a loan to buy the property. When the 1929 stock market crash occurs soon afterward, Sexton loses his job and finds menial work in the nearby mills. There, he joins a group of desperate mill hands who have endured draconian working conditions for years, and now, facing extortionate production quotas and reduced pay, want to form a union. The lives of the Beechers become entwined with the strikers, particularly a principled 20-year-old loom fixer named McDermott and Francis, the 11-year-old fatherless boy he takes under his wing. A fifth major character is spoiled, dissolute socialite Vivian Burton, who is transformed by her friendship with Honora. As Honora becomes aware that Sexton is untrustworthy, she is drawn to McDermott, who tries to hide his love for her. The plot moves forward via kaleidoscopic vignettes from each character's point of view, building emotional tension until the violent, rather melodramatic climax when the mill owners' minions confront the strikers. Shreve is skilled at interpolating historical background, and her descriptions of the different social strata the millworkers, the lower-middle-class Sextons, the idle rich enhance a touching story about loyalty and betrayal, responsibility and dishonor. This is one of Shreve's best, likely to win her a wider audience. 6-city author tour. (Apr. 9) Forecast: Expectations of brisk sales, indicated by the one-day laydown, will likely be achieved. Readers should find timely resonance in the setting of 1920s economic turbulence.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Patricia lucky7 wrote on 2/22/2009...


good story, timely subplots. The main characters are developed well, the secondary characters, not so well ..... however it didn't take away from the overall storyline. Especially interesting were the short letters from Honora's mother, giving advice on how to conserve, make-do, "re-cycle", and maintain a household in the midst of the great depression. I know she doesn't do sequels, but I would have liked to have known how the rest of Honora's life turned out.


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