Thursday, August 25, 2016
The Woman in the Photo by Mary Hogan
The Woman in the Photo by Mary Hogan is a contemporary/historical novel in which a modern-day adoptee in a closed adoption, Lee Parker, searches for clues to her ancestry while in 1889, Elizabeth Halberlin vacations with her wealthy family at a lake above Johnstown, Pennsylvania. Their two stories are mostly told via alternating chapters, although that pattern is broken a bit toward the end.
I was quickly swept into The Woman in the Photo. The parallel storytelling concept is one that I think has been overdone in recent years and I will sometimes take a break from that particular type of book, but I always return. I don't mind the shifts back and forth; I just find that I tend to prefer one storyline over the other and end up wishing the author had focused on my favorite. I did enjoy the historical storyline more than the present-day storyline, but I also thought the intertwining stories were both well told and wrapped up nicely, if predictably. The Woman in the Photo sucked me in so thoroughly that I didn't give much thought to its minor flaws while I was reading, so I'm just being picky upon reflection.
The historical time and place will ring a bell for those who familiar with the Johnstown Flood -- a devastating flood caused by the collapse of a dam. I read about the Johnstown Flood in Reader's Digest when I was young. Like the story of WWII that first captured my interest, I'm pretty sure it was a "Drama in Real Life", one of Reader's Digest's regular features. I've read a little bit more about the flood, since then, but not a lot. So, much of what I learned about the flood was new to me and I was completely unaware of its cause, the wealthy people who lived on the lake having dammed its spillway to prevent the fish they stocked from going downstream (not a spoiler, since Elizabeth mentions it at the beginning of the book). That and some other details about the flood made it an especially gripping and fascinating read.
Highly recommended - The connection between the historical and contemporary characters is obvious, the romances they both experience predictable, and there were a few minor plot points that I thought were just unnecessary and weird, but none of those things mattered at all to me while I was reading. I thought the prose was very good, I cared about the characters, and the choice of the Johnstown Flood as the historical setting made the story a unique one. I raced through The Woman in the Photo and enjoyed every minute. Five great books in a single week and a book festival combined to knock my reading slump on its knees, so I'll definitely remember The Woman in the Photo fondly for its role in breaking my slump, as well.
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5 comments:
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Yeah, I'm a little weary of the parallel storytelling concept, although it's been a while since I've come across it. The last was probably Jodi Picoult's novel about WWII (The Storyteller), which was outstanding, by the way. Glad you're out of your slump!
ReplyDeleteI go through avoidance phases with all kinds of books, not just the parallel contemporary/historical plotlines. When I begin to tire of them, I just ignore them for a while. The idea is to keep from burning out entirely - I've done that twice for two different genres and don't want to go there, again. I can still enjoy even a concept that's overdone, provided I don't read the same thing too often. I haven't read The Storyteller and you just said the magic words "WWII". :)
DeleteI listened to The Storyteller and really enjoyed it! It's probably my favorite book of Picoult's.
DeleteI'm ok with the parallel story line. This one sounds good. And a book that can get you out of a slump is always a good thing.
ReplyDeleteIt is good and my friend Maudeen said The Woman in the Photo pulled her out of a slump, as well!
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