Oprah's Book Club Picks
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Black and Blue (Oprah's Book Club)
by Anna QuindlenSign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
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avg 3.52
bookshelves:
the-okay
Read in November, 2004
I have to admit that I wasn't very surprised when I looked up this title on Internet Movie Database and saw that this book had been made into a movie. Nor was I surprised that it was a made for TV movie. And I'm going to take a wild shot in the dark and say it was specifically made for Lifetime... Television for Women. Because everything about this book kept bringing up that whispery woman's voice as the narrator. I kept hearing, "Anna Quindlen... A writer for women..." No joke....more
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2007
Read in February, 2007
I would not have picked up Black and Blue, with its proudly-displayed "Oprah's Book Club" emblem, had it not been a quarter at the annual neighborhood yard sale, but seeing as it was under a dollar, and was written by a journalist I admire, I thought I'd give it a whirl. Basic plot: smart woman in abusive relationship almost dies from a beating, and finally leaves with her son. She starts a new life, but it is clouded by the threat of her husband finding her. Quindlen creates a believe...more
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owned
Read in March, 2006
Black and Blue is the story of a woman who flees an abusive relationship, taking her son and attempting to disappear into residential Florida, all the while waiting for her husband, a New York cop, to find and hurt her. The book is not Quindlen's best and while it is readable, and at less than 400 pages a manageable length, it feels like little more than a Lifetime "woman's" movie in novel form. I wouldn't recommend this book, especially in comparison to Quindlen's other work, a...more
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fiction
Read in January, 2008
If you don't like wife beater books, then this one's not for you. Fran Benedetto begins her first person narrative while sitting on a bench waiting for further instructions from a woman who's helping her run away from her alcoholic and wildly abusive husband (with their 10-year-old-son in tow). The book follows her as she begins her new life, which in my opinion is much better than reading about her getting beaten all the time wondering why she won't leave. Good insight into the horrifying and ...more
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Read in January, 2006
I love Oprah books, okay? I just do. I love dark, heavy depressing subjects. I always have, most likely always will. I love reading about betrayal and revenge and cheats and liars. So I enjoyed this one. I didn't love it; it was sometimes predictable and wasn't always well organized, but it kept me engaged and wanting to hear more, which is all I really ask of a book: ENTERTAIN ME. If they do more, that's fantastic. This one wasn't fantastic, but I still enjoyed it and wanted to find out what wo...more
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The thing about a lot of these Oprah book club book selections is that the books are ripe with women who eschew responsiblity for their lives, or the books are so predictable to be boring or they just suck. There came a point that I stopped believing these were books that Oprah would really want to read.
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bookshelves:
2008,
l-book_beauties,
l-oprah
Read in June, 2008
recommended to LizBeth by:
Books and Broads
If you have been lucky enough never to have been hit by a man, Anna Quindlen Black and Blue is written so that you can walk in a beaten woman’s shoes. No intelligent woman would ever stay with a man who hits her; right? But love does many things to a person and intelligence is usually the first thing that goes.
No one argues that love and lust of a woman, such as the beautiful Helen, which poets have written about for centuries, could launch a thousand ships. So why is it so amazing to thi...more
No one argues that love and lust of a woman, such as the beautiful Helen, which poets have written about for centuries, could launch a thousand ships. So why is it so amazing to thi...more
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Read in May, 2008
I was debating whether to give this book one or two stars. I decided on two, but it could have gone either way. This was another one of my used book 10 cent purchases from my local library. And after reading this book, I totally understand why it was being sold for 10 cents.
The novel started slowly and never really took off. In the end, I just felt let down. The subject of domestic violence is a difficult for a woman with my personality characteristic to understand. I just happen to be one ...more
The novel started slowly and never really took off. In the end, I just felt let down. The subject of domestic violence is a difficult for a woman with my personality characteristic to understand. I just happen to be one ...more
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bookshelves:
2007,
contemporary-womens-fic
Read in August, 2007
This is the story of Fran Flynn Benedetto, a nurse who is married to a police officer in NYC. They have one son. Fran's husband beats her brutally but she stays for many years until it becomes evident to her that Bobby will eventually kill her. She and her son enter a sort of witness-protection program for victims of domestic abuse- new names, birthdays, paperwork, new apartment in a new area of the country, new job and school. But it's hard for Fran's son to understand why they've disappeared w...more
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Read in January, 2003
It was so eye-opening to read this book about the experiences of an abused woman and how she tried to leave her cop husband -- taking their only son with her -- and start a new life with a new identity (all the while knowing that he was looking for them...and could show up at any time). It's so easy to judge others (well, mis-judge others). At one point she talks about how she would still go to sleep in their bed (next to him) after he'd beat her. She said something about how most people woul...more
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Truthfully, I didn't know this was an Oprah book until my sister saw me reading this. It's rather intense, but written delicately. The story holds great suspense, but at the same time the reader can feel the main character's rationale, albeit foreign at times. It was a very quick read; great for a lazy day.
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Read in August, 2008
I know, I know, another Oprah's book club book. I should be shot for feeding into her machine.
This book was a borderline one star book until the ending. The book itself is another insipid, cookie-cutter abused wife esapes her husband taking their child. I'm pretty sure the author needed about zero in background work and research to dig up this tarp. Kind of wish I had spent the time reading this to do something, ANYTHING more productive. I can never have that time back again Oprah! You fail...more
This book was a borderline one star book until the ending. The book itself is another insipid, cookie-cutter abused wife esapes her husband taking their child. I'm pretty sure the author needed about zero in background work and research to dig up this tarp. Kind of wish I had spent the time reading this to do something, ANYTHING more productive. I can never have that time back again Oprah! You fail...more
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Read in January, 1998
"The first time my husband hit me I was nineteen years old. One sentence and I'm lost."
This is how Anna Quindlin begins her novel about a women abused by her husband, and forced to run and assume a new identity. I had a hard time deciding between three or four stars, because I'm not usually a fan of books that explore abusive relationsips. But Quindlin is a good writer, and she makes the main character come alive, so four stars.
This is how Anna Quindlin begins her novel about a women abused by her husband, and forced to run and assume a new identity. I had a hard time deciding between three or four stars, because I'm not usually a fan of books that explore abusive relationsips. But Quindlin is a good writer, and she makes the main character come alive, so four stars.
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Read in June, 2008
Married to a cop who beats her, Fran Benedetto finally gets up the nerve to leave, taking her son with her. They have to hide, starting over in a new place, with new identities. Yes - some of the plot is predictable, and the ending is pretty much a given, but still this book is so gripping! It sucks you right in and doesn't let go until it's finished.
I read this book several years ago and really liked it, and I just re-read it - in just over a day (it's a quick read!)! I followed my 20 month...more
I read this book several years ago and really liked it, and I just re-read it - in just over a day (it's a quick read!)! I followed my 20 month...more
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bookshelves:
no-chance-of-reading-what-so-ever,
to-read
Just reading the synopsis on this book I know for a fact I will NEVER read it. It brings me no satisfaction or joy, (which is why I pursue reading to the extent that I do) to read about a woman being repeatedly abused and thrown against her husband's fist. There is enough pain and suffering in this world and I've known one too many women who have had to live with this very real and dehumanizing pain, to have to sit through it. Especially when there are so many wonderful things to read about. ...more
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Read in July, 2008
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Read in October, 2008
This book was ok. Kind of draggy, and very repetetive. The draggy thing seems to be a theme in the Oprah books. Girlfriend likes a lot of introspective rambling, I think. hehe
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Read in August, 2001
I felt like I was getting a good understadning of how an abusive relationship comes to be. How the abused is not exactly without fault. Meaning, there are warning signs, the abused has a very strong attraction to the abuser and even plays her part in continuing the cylce. Her admission that her son will someday treat his loved one in a similar manner, what else would be his definition of love? Sheadmits that doesn't give a damn for that girl; her son is her heart. The fact that she marries ...more
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I have to agree with Sammy, below -- this novel is definitely perfect for a Lifetime made-for-tv movie. I can so see Valerie Bertinelli as the main character! Lifetime movies are great guilty pleasures, though, and the writing here is pretty good ..... plus I appreciate the fact that Fran is not so one-dimensional that she makes her choice look like a no-brainer.
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