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The Book of Ruth (Oprah's Book Club)


by Jane Hamilton

List Price: $14.95
Price: $10.17
You Save: $4.78 (32%)
Available: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank: 74860
Studio: Anchor
Binding: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 336
Publication Date: December 01, 1989
Publisher: Anchor


EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description
Winner of the 1989 PEN/Hemingway Foundation Award  for best first novel, this exquisite book  confronts real-life issues of alienation and violence  from which the author creates a stunning testament  to the human capacity for mercy, compassion and  love.

Amazon.com
Oprah Book Club® Selection, November 1996: The Book of Ruth is a virtuoso performance and that's precisely why it can be excruciating to read. Author Jane Hamilton leads us through the arid life of Ruth Grey, who extracts what small pleasures and graces she can from a tiny Illinois town and the broken people who inhabit it. Ruth's prime tormentor is her mother May, whose husband died in World War II and took her future with him. More poor familial luck has given Ruth a brother who is a math prodigy; Matt sucks up any stray attention like a black hole. Ruth is left to survive on her own resources, which are meager. She struggles along, subsisting on crumbs of affection meted out by her Aunt Sid and, later, her screwed-up husband Ruby. Hamilton has perfect pitch. So perfect that you wince with pain for confused but fundamentally good Ruth as she walks a dead-end path. The book ends with the prospect of redemption, thank goodness--but the tale is nevertheless much more bitter than sweet.


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 3.5 based on 286 reviews)

A faint gleam of hope in a bleak landscape  
What ever happened to that odd, quiet girl in your high school class? Ruth is that invisible girl, poor and proud, but curious, solid, and worth knowing all the same. She has a talent for bowling, a talent for loving, a gift for friendship, and a longing for understanding and truth. Her narrative looks at her bleak life unsparingly, tries to make sense of her suffering, and doesn't dodge her own culpability. We listen as she tries to make sense of tragedy, tries to understand the glib promises of faith, and tries to learn to be the mother her child needs. We count our blessings in comparison, but with a shudder, realize that "there but for grace, go I."
June 23, 2008

Soul riveting  
A sad story about a girl woman who suffers low self esteem derived from a long suffering childhood of verbal sometimes physical abuse at the hand of her well meaning mother. She is the strong one (only she doesn't know it) who shows unconditional love for a pathetic man whom she only sees the good in when no one else can. Sometimes we all get trapped in these type situations.
October 31, 2007

Intimate portrayal of small town life  
The Book of Ruth does a great job of examining family dynamics and everyday life in a small rural town. The relationships with the characters were realistic and the internal conflict of the heroine was poignant.
June 06, 2007

riveting  
I found the book to be very riveting and could not put the book down. I do admit it was very depressing at times but life is that way. The thing I liked about this book was that it was sooooo realistic. You can go to any town in the usa and find somebody like that. And the truth is they do not know they are bad off for this is all they know. I think she did redeem herself at the end. It was one of the best books I have ever read.
May 14, 2007

Sad but Believable  
This is a very sad, but believable, account of a young woman growing up poor in a small town. She dreams of getting out of her current situation and away from her critical and demanding mother. To make her current situation worse, she marries a drug-addicted alcoholic.

The author, Jane Hamilton, writes beautifully and even a little comically. I found that I was looking forward to the times when I could get back to the book. I saw Jane Hamilton at an "author speak" recently and she said that her books do not have a plot so much as they draw characters and tell stories about them. This is evident in the "Book of Ruth" as nothing is really resolved in the end, but there is certainly a climax.

Highly recommended.
May 09, 2007


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