book data
433 ratings,
3.07
average rating, 125 reviews
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published
October 17th 2006
(first published 2001)
by Doubleday
binding
Hardcover, 368 pages
characters
isbn
0385513232
(isbn13: 9780385513234)
description
In late afternoon on November 7, 1985, sixteen-year-old Mary Veal was abducted after field hockey practice at her all-girls New England prep school.
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 678)
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1 star (39)
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avg 3.07
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
recommended to Lena by:
Shellbell, Jason
At the start of Heidi Julavits' intriguing novel, 16-year old Mary Veal disappears from her private school one afternoon in 1985. Three weeks later, she reappears claiming to have little memory of what happened to her. In the months that follow, numerous psychiatrists attempt to discern whether Mary is a victim of abduction and rape or a liar who engineered her own disappearance for mysterious, sixteen-year old reasons.
Julavits novel switches back and forth between a narrative enti...more
Julavits novel switches back and forth between a narrative enti...more
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7 comments
Read in August, 2007
(The much longer full review of this book can be found at the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com].)
Okay, I admit it; that the subject of today's review was not scheduled to be read for another three or four books now in my queue list (i.e. the pile of library books and advanced reading copies at the foot of my bed), but was purposely moved up because of recently filing a very bad review here of Nell Freudenberger's The Dissident. And that's because, as a w...more
Okay, I admit it; that the subject of today's review was not scheduled to be read for another three or four books now in my queue list (i.e. the pile of library books and advanced reading copies at the foot of my bed), but was purposely moved up because of recently filing a very bad review here of Nell Freudenberger's The Dissident. And that's because, as a w...more
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Read in February, 2008
This book made me feel somewhat uncomfortable and frankly there were times when I just wanted to put it down and never look at it again. It offers up a number of questions and then throws out several answers to them, all of which are seemingly rejected by Julavits through her characters. I kept expecting a breakthrough that never came, an answer that was ultimately never provided... and I don't mean an answer as in a "whodunit," I mean an answer like, what does she suggest that her c...more
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Read in February, 2008
I'm going to say what quite a few other reviewers of this book on goodreads have said, and that's that I wanted to like this book more. It's not that I didn't like it...Julavits is a master of snarky, quick dialogue; this is a complex novel told from various perspectives that circle an incident in a teenage girl's life, and from a writerly standpoint I can only imagine she must have struggled to piece it together. I respect this book, is what I'm trying to say.
But. I felt a little to...more
But. I felt a little to...more
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Read in March, 2007
The Uses of Enchantment tells the story of a middle-class suburban teenager, Mary Veal, who mysteriously disappears. When she turns up after a couple of months, she is taken under the wing of a therapist who determines that she faked her own abduction, and writes a book about this "syndrome" in adolescent girls. The story is told from different perspectives--that of the therapist, the present-day teenager (now in her 30s), and chapters entitled "What Might Have Happened," whi...more
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05/13/09
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Read in January, 2006
Victim or Vixen? Liar or whore? These are questions posed in this psychological exploration of a young sixteen-year old girl learning to wield her sexuality, with devastating results to all involved. One day in 1985, young teenager Mary Veal disappears from field-hockey practice at her all-girls New England prep school. She reappears a few weeks later with little memory of what has happened to her, claiming she’s been abducted. Sent to a psychologist, Mary is a difficult patient, and her docto...more
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Read in March, 2009
I picked this book up in audio format from the local library and listened to it on my way to and from work. Overall, the book is excellent with very vivid and detailed characters. While the story is quite compelling, many of the characters feel similar. The character of Dr. Hammer also seems overly analytical beyond a fault to the point it deters somewhat from the story. The other irritation with the story is that it is broken down into three pieces: "The What Might have been", Cu...more
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02/05/09
Bookmarks Magazine
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There is varied critical reaction to Heidi Julavits's third novel, which addresses memory, psychological subversion, hysteria, and mother-daughter relationships, but reviewers liked it better than her previous work, The Effect of Living Backwards (**1/2 Sept/Oct 2003). The novel takes its title from Bruno Bettelheim's 1976 study exploring the effects of fairy tales on children and its inspiration from Freud's Dora: An Analysis of a Case of Hysteria and the Salem witch trials. Enchantment's fans
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Read in July, 2009
Interesting. Layered. Puzzling (on purpose). I'll be thinking about this book for days. I love its indictment of therapy (Is it helpful? Are there any answers? What is truth, and how is it twisted by schools of thought?) and meditations on desire.
I think, in the end, the entire book is about everyone around Mary Veal misunderstanding her - in the book's parlance, "missing the point". In the end, I think the only one who really gets her, or could have gotten her, had sh...more
I think, in the end, the entire book is about everyone around Mary Veal misunderstanding her - in the book's parlance, "missing the point". In the end, I think the only one who really gets her, or could have gotten her, had sh...more
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Read in December, 2008
This book began with a great deal of promise, but as I got to knew the characters, I liked it less and less.
Heidi Julavits demonstrates how one can avoid using quotation marks to indicate dialogue without confusing the reader, a lesson Ali Smith could stand to learn. The Uses of Enchantment is far superior to The Accidental in use of language and style to create a particular atmosphere and introduce the character. I enjoy how Julavits varies the chapters among "what might have...more
Heidi Julavits demonstrates how one can avoid using quotation marks to indicate dialogue without confusing the reader, a lesson Ali Smith could stand to learn. The Uses of Enchantment is far superior to The Accidental in use of language and style to create a particular atmosphere and introduce the character. I enjoy how Julavits varies the chapters among "what might have...more
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Read in January, 2009
A fantasy, alternately sharp and misty, of the games one plays (and doesn't play) with the few powers one has. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
The book unfolds in three alternating sections. The thirtyish protagonist, Mary, visits her hometown for her mother's funeral, in the company of her family members (all of whom are comic characters, slight and vicious). The teenage Mary embarks on an... escapade with an older male stranger. And the teenage Mary attends weekly sessions with an analyst....more
The book unfolds in three alternating sections. The thirtyish protagonist, Mary, visits her hometown for her mother's funeral, in the company of her family members (all of whom are comic characters, slight and vicious). The teenage Mary embarks on an... escapade with an older male stranger. And the teenage Mary attends weekly sessions with an analyst....more
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Read in April, 2008
I wasn't sure if I would really enjoy reading a book about a teenage girl who possibly was kidnapped and molested and possibly made the whole thing up -- gee, why not? I did, though because Mary is pretty clever, and saucy and her family totally reeks of dysfunction. Both of her uppity snot sisters could easily suck all of the oxygen out of a room by uttering one selfish, shitty thought going through their heads. Her therapists are completely self-interested and her mother is a complete mystery...more
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Read in March, 2008
a high school field hockey player is either abducted or an abductor, when she disappears for a few weeks ala an older student from the school who faked her own abduction years earlier. the novel follows through storylines: what may or may not have happened in the time she was gone, present day when she returns home after the death of her mother, the notes of the doctor who develops a psychological theory based upon a loose version of the story the girl isn't so much telling, as inferring.
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Ermmm...I really wanted to like this book. I really wanted to be seduced (word carefully chosen for this particular book) by the ideas of witches and adolescent girls who identify with the persecution of witches and all the sexual undercurrents that goes along with being an adolescent girl, especially in a repressive family and repressive (allegedly) part of the country (though I'm hard-pressed to believe New England is sooooOOOOoo much more repressive than, say, you know, most of the rest of th...more
Read in January, 2008
The book's premise intrigued me. A girl may or may not have faked her own abduction, and if she faked her own abduction, she may have been inspired by another girl, who attended the same school earlier.
The book has three timelines--the "present day" of 1999, the 1986 post-return to her family, and "what may have happened". Each chapter focuses on one timeline, and these timelines alternate, each informing your experience of the other, sometimes a little too neatly...more
The book has three timelines--the "present day" of 1999, the 1986 post-return to her family, and "what may have happened". Each chapter focuses on one timeline, and these timelines alternate, each informing your experience of the other, sometimes a little too neatly...more
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Read in March, 2008
recommended to viola by:
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in the end i think this book was more of an excuse for heidi to show off how quirky of a conversationalist she could be than anything else. all of the characters speak using the same sort of voice. everyone dodges questions and tries too hard to remain cryptic about useless information.
the whole unresolved narrative bit is also overplayed. i know that i'm not supposed to piece together what happened, and i'm completely fine with that, but don't remind me everything three pages that ...more
the whole unresolved narrative bit is also overplayed. i know that i'm not supposed to piece together what happened, and i'm completely fine with that, but don't remind me everything three pages that ...more
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Read in May, 2007
I'll start by saying that I was a little turned off that I couldn't find a paperback copy of this book. OK, now that's out of the way, I'll move on to the more substantial review.
I recently read The Life of Pi and The Uses of Enchantment ended the same way for me. Where I'm still sort of piecing together what "may have happened." I like that. I get more enjoyment from a book that has me thinking about it for days after finishing than those that come in a nice, complete ...more
I recently read The Life of Pi and The Uses of Enchantment ended the same way for me. Where I'm still sort of piecing together what "may have happened." I like that. I get more enjoyment from a book that has me thinking about it for days after finishing than those that come in a nice, complete ...more
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Read in May, 2009
Layered. Psychological. Did she or didn't she? Who to believe?
Michael Chabon and Elizabeth Stout liked it, so maybe I am missing something. I mean, I liked it well enough but it didn't come together like I kept hoping it would. All the pieces were great in theory: witches, a potentially faked abduction, twisted psychologists, New England repression of female sexuality. All good things, right? But it seemed to me that they remained discrete things instead of coalescing into a p...more
Michael Chabon and Elizabeth Stout liked it, so maybe I am missing something. I mean, I liked it well enough but it didn't come together like I kept hoping it would. All the pieces were great in theory: witches, a potentially faked abduction, twisted psychologists, New England repression of female sexuality. All good things, right? But it seemed to me that they remained discrete things instead of coalescing into a p...more
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Read in January, 2008
I found it a really intense, gripping read... but the ending was so disappointing. I found myself angry that we do not find out what "the man" told Mary's mother, and also kind of disappointed not to find out what really happened... I know that the ending was meant to have that effect, but that kind of ending is just frustrating...
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Read in March, 2009
Just finished reading this one last week for Book Club tonight. It was disturbingly intersting. I read it on the heels of The Time Traveler's Wife, so I was still in the mood for the context and the style of writing. Funny how I love books that bounce back and forth in the story and keep you on your toes. Or me at least.
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quotes from this book
"Like Semmering Academy, the Grove School was a Gothic pile of bricks run by 1950s-era chalk drones, which maintained its cultural viability by perpetuating a weirdly seductive anxiety throughout its community. Mary herself was a victim of the seduction; despite the trying and repetitive emotional requirements of her job, she remained eternally fascinated by the wicker-thin girls and their wicker-thin mothers, all of them favoring dark wool skirts and macintoshes and unreadably far-away expressions; if she squinted, they could have emerged intact from any of the last seven decades."
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