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Name All the Animals: A Memoir : Horror Book Reviews
Review of Name All the Animals: A Memoir
A luminous, poignant true story, Alison Smith's stunning first book, Name All the Animals, is an unparalleled account of grief and secret love: the tale of a family clinging to the memory of a lost child, and a young woman struggling to define herself in the wake of his loss.
As children, siblings Alison and Roy Smith were so close that their mother called them by one name: Alroy. But on a cool summer morning when Alison was fifteen, she woke to learn that Roy, eighteen, was dead. This is Smith's extraordinary account of the impact of that loss -- on herself, on her parents, and on a deeply religious community.
At home, Alison and her parents sleepwalk in shifts. Alison hoards food for her lost brother, hides in the backyard fort they built together, and waits for him to return. During the day, she breaks every rule at Our Lady of Mercy School for Girls, where the baffled but loving nuns offer prayer, Shakespeare, and a job running the switchboard. In the end, Alison finds her own way to survive: a startling and taboo first love that helps her discover a world beyond the death of her brother.
An intimate book written in clear-eyed prose, Name All the Animals announces a brilliant new writer with a keen insight into the emotional life of the American family, the power of sibling love and loyalty, and the excruciating joy of first, forbidden love. Smith tells the story through her own fifteen-year-old eyes, with such expert pacing and narrative suspense that readers will find the book hard to put down.
Heartbreaking but hopeful, this is ultimately a book less about loss than it is about love -- about the excitement and anguish of Alison's first love, about her parents' enduring romance, about a community's passion for its faith, and about a well-loved boy who dies too young. A fiercely beautiful, redemptive book, it is sure to be a classic.
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Comments for Name All the Animals: A Memoir
- Posted on 2009-02-26
Great Book
I definitely think people should read this book. It opens your perspective and gives a very unbiased view of her own life, if you can actually do that. I was enthralled from the get-go and read it like how most read "Harry Potter."
- Posted on 2009-02-25
A Memorable Memoir
This was really good- for a memoir, it read just like a novel. Whereas many memoirs have an inherent sense of distance in relaying the events and experiences of their past, this one had a real sense of immediacy. There were very sentences that relayed anything of the future - no real hints as to how it all "turned out." She is a very talented writer and I would read just about anything else that she wrote. I was just impressed by the whole book. It was very emotional, and just... quite excellent.
- Posted on 2008-12-02
OK but incomplete
Alison Smith must have been a bit unbalanced to start with to have had such an extreme reaction to grief, involving years of anorexia and occasional suicidal ideation. Her "coming out of the closet" with Terry is left dangling with no account of the aftermath with her family, friends or herself. We never learn of how her grappling with her sexuality is continued or resolved. The superstition and narrow-mindedness of her Catholicism as practiced by her family and school is almost a character in the book. All in all an engaging book but one left with unanswered questions that would have made it more satisfying. This girl needed therapy to help her resolve her demons and I hope she got it.
- Posted on 2008-09-17
I enjoyed listening to the book
Apparently there is more than one audio version of this book - the one I heard was narrated by Christina Moore and she was terrific. I suspect I enjoyed listening to it more than I would have liked reading the print version. It really is a very interesting, totally believable (to me), coming-of-age story, complicated by the death of her brother. It probably is more real for those of us who grew up Catholic during that time period. Very thought provoking and poignant but likely to not be appreciated by those who are looking for lots of action, adventure, excitement.
- Posted on 2008-01-28
Is that all there is?
This book was in a batch of books someone gave me. It started slow and never picked up speed. I kept waiting for something to happen (OK, something happens but I just don't care), and now, 50 pages later, it's beginning to dawn on me that it's not going to get any better. I don't need a plot if there is character development or the writing is just beautiful. None of that here. Sorry.
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