We Were the Mulvaneys (Oprah's Book Club)
by Joyce Carol Oates
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 5545)
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Read in August, 2007
By the end of this book I was crying. I just want to start with that and get it cleared out of the way. It wasn't just a sniff and the threat of tears, I had actual tears running down my face and snot streaming out of my nose. I was leaking enough that I actually had to put the book down and go grab some tissues.
This book is very emotional, not just with how it makes the reader feel, but with how it's written. There was something unique about Oates writing that reflected a purely emotion...more
This book is very emotional, not just with how it makes the reader feel, but with how it's written. There was something unique about Oates writing that reflected a purely emotion...more
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Read in August, 2008
Fairly rich writing, like butter cream slathered all up and down the page, even in tumultuous situations, but totally accurate at the same time. Almost too accurate, if that's possible. The odd part was that despite such lush descriptive and moving narratives, I still wanted more from the book. Perhaps that's the point right? I mean, well, we saw "Dad" Mulvaney disintegrate, but we didn't get a subjective glance until late into the novel, which is probably ok, but still, maybe not ...more
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Read in January, 2004
recommended to Spudsie by:
Oprah's book club
Let me start by saying it has been years since I’ve read this book. (I was on an Oprah’s Book Club reading binge at the time.) In all fairness to the book I should probably read it again before writing anything about it—but I have 3 books I am currently reading and 26 more in a pile on the floor waiting to be read. And this book left me with such strong feelings that I still remember some of them, so perhaps it’s worth writing about.
I have a few strong memories of this book. I re...more
I have a few strong memories of this book. I re...more
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
a very patient person.
This book is about a large family, the Mulvaneys, living all happily and blahblahblah until something terrible happens to the sole daughter. Although the book is basically about this event and the aftermath, it takes about 100 pages to actually get to the plot. The beginning of the book goes on about the Mulvaneys and how wonderful they were, describing their house and its inhabitants with a little too much detail. Most chapters had this basic formula: Narraration of some memory a character had/...more
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This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in March, 2003
i didn't like it much. i am a big fan of her stories. it opened well, but once the event happens, which the books turns on, it falls apart and i lost interest in the characters. i think there are novels that should be long stories. its because the theme is great, but the plot, the characters, the story do not need the length of a novel to develop. and instead do not stand under the weight of that much scrutiny. i liked the movie brokeback mountain by proulx [sic], but her short story was a...more
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Read in August, 2008
What a great book this was...
<<Corinne Mulvaney had told her children a story about how she and her mother survived a horrible snow storm when she was a child, where others died in the storm. Her son, Patrick asked her why God sent this horrible blizzard just to turn around and save them, but not the others. What was so special about she and their Grandma...that God favored them over the ones who died?>>
Her response to what I wrote above (to Patrick's question)...a s...more
<<Corinne Mulvaney had told her children a story about how she and her mother survived a horrible snow storm when she was a child, where others died in the storm. Her son, Patrick asked her why God sent this horrible blizzard just to turn around and save them, but not the others. What was so special about she and their Grandma...that God favored them over the ones who died?>>
Her response to what I wrote above (to Patrick's question)...a s...more
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This was the first Oates novel I read (as opposed to her short stories, which I liked), and it didn't do much for me. It's a very cultivated, cohesive book--never more strikingly than in the parallelism between the first and last lines, both of which echo the title--and yet something doesn't click. It's a little too cultivated and cohesive, a little artificial. The characters shade into stereotypes: Mike the jock, Patrick the bright loner, Marianne the pure-hearted and wronged daughter, and Judd...more
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Read in July, 2005
I have seen this movie on TV several times and finally found the book at the library. I was suprised at how long it was...nearly 500 pages...but I was excited to finally be reading it. In this novel, Oates tells the story of a near-perfect family...mom and dad in love, 4 loving siblings, all living in a small town on a farm filled with love and animals. Everything is going along fine until the only daughter, who is beautiful and universally loved, suffers a tragedy. From this point on, the entir...more
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Read in December, 2005
I finished reading We Were The Mulvaneys by Joyce Carol Oates the other day. This was another story about a dysfunctional family but with a difference. You didn't see the dysfunction until something really bad happened to one of the family members. Again, I don't want to spoil it. The Mulvaneys seemed to be one of those close knit, well-to-do, very happy and successful families people secretly envy. Then comes this tragedy...and the family just totally falls apart. Why? If they wer...more
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Read in August, 2008
*****Spoiler warning
The story line was interesting, about a family who struggles with their daughter's rape. Oates takes the reader through the lives of each family member and how the unspoken trama effects the lives of each. It is a sad glimpse into how fallible or infallible humans can be. The age old issue of blame toward the female by a community when a sexual crime is committed rears its ugly head. The family is left to pick up the pieces or in this case, lose everything in spite of tryin...more
The story line was interesting, about a family who struggles with their daughter's rape. Oates takes the reader through the lives of each family member and how the unspoken trama effects the lives of each. It is a sad glimpse into how fallible or infallible humans can be. The age old issue of blame toward the female by a community when a sexual crime is committed rears its ugly head. The family is left to pick up the pieces or in this case, lose everything in spite of tryin...more
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This book was extremely good, and Joyce Carol Oates once again wrote a book that I enjoyed [ other books read included Big Mouth and Ugly Girl and After the accident, i picked myself up spread my wings and flew away etc.] The main focus was on the mulvaney family of upstate New York. It was your typical family with a mother and father, 3 healthy sons and a beautiful daughter. Religious and loving, every family was envious of their strength and power of maintaining such a peaceful household. We s...more
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Read in November, 2000
This is the story of the Mulvaneys, a very close family in New York state. The story revolves around the rape of Corrine, (that may not be her name, I can't remember) the only daughter/sister in the household, by a schoolmate following a dance. The family is shattered by this tragedy and they each travel in different directions in order to cope. The farm is neglected as is the previously precious daughter. The one brother, Patrick, goes on to study medicine at Cornell where he continues his ...more
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
readers who can handle a labor intensive book
This book was labor intensive and worth it. Oates puts her heart and soul into this one to weave a meticulous tale spanning decades.
It's the story of a perfect family or rather, one everyone thinks is perfect. And then something happens that shakes up things for the rest of their life. Or would these shake ups have happened anyway, without this big life changing event. Was it inevitable? This is the question I struggle with.
Parts of the book are slow and so detailed that I loose inter...more
It's the story of a perfect family or rather, one everyone thinks is perfect. And then something happens that shakes up things for the rest of their life. Or would these shake ups have happened anyway, without this big life changing event. Was it inevitable? This is the question I struggle with.
Parts of the book are slow and so detailed that I loose inter...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommended to Ann by:
No onerecommends it for: No one
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in August, 2002
Downloaded from Audible.com
Narrator: J. Todd Adams
Publisher: HighBridge Audio, 2001
Length: 7 hours (abridged)
Publisher's Summary
The Mulvaneys are blessed by all that makes life sweet: a hardworking father, a loving mother, three fine sons, and a bright, pretty daughter. They are confident in their love for each other and their position in the rural community of Mt. Ephraim, New York. But something happens on Valentine's Day, 1976 - an incident that is hushed up in the town and never spoke...more
Narrator: J. Todd Adams
Publisher: HighBridge Audio, 2001
Length: 7 hours (abridged)
Publisher's Summary
The Mulvaneys are blessed by all that makes life sweet: a hardworking father, a loving mother, three fine sons, and a bright, pretty daughter. They are confident in their love for each other and their position in the rural community of Mt. Ephraim, New York. But something happens on Valentine's Day, 1976 - an incident that is hushed up in the town and never spoke...more
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Read in December, 2007
It took persistence to get through this book, but persistence paid off. There is truth here that is painful. Families can love fiercely when they ought to love gently.
There is a realness to the Mulvaneys, all believable people, all broken by a single incident, all seeking reconciliation in strange and separate ways. It comes in a single incident, at least for a day, a moment in time. Though a thousand small events can build over time to draw us together or tear us apart, the tipping p...more
There is a realness to the Mulvaneys, all believable people, all broken by a single incident, all seeking reconciliation in strange and separate ways. It comes in a single incident, at least for a day, a moment in time. Though a thousand small events can build over time to draw us together or tear us apart, the tipping p...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in September, 2004
recommends it for:
people who enjoy a bit of dark drama, social commentary
I have read other Joyce Carol Oates novels and looked forward to reading this when it became available (I selected it for my bookclub). It is a big book but I didn't find it a slog to read. The characters are really rounded and after having lived in country towns, I could identify with some of their traits, even though it was written about a different country. A family cruising throught life is suddenly thrown into turmoil, and the cracks that were tiny and unnoticed become major, resulting i...more
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Read in January, 2008
I love Oates' style of writing. She has such an amazing way with words, and really knows how to dig deep into a person's character and pull out the tiniest, sometimes unpleasant details and nuances. This book is no exception. I don't do summaries, but I thought the way the story progressed was incredibly tragic, and at the same time, kind of beautiful. I wasn't even upset at the slightly cliche happy ending, because I felt that the family deserved happiness, after everything. One thing, however,...more
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Read in June, 2008
I still hate that this was an Oprah's Book Club selection, but wow... this book was amazing. I finally got through the 454 pages after three weeks. I kept thinking I would finish at night, and then I'd have to force myself to put it down before I fell asleep and the book landed on my face and suffocated me. It's a huge hardback... that would have been icky.
Anyway... Joyce Carol Oates is one of my favorite authors, and she did not let me down. Her characters are so utterly vivid, you f...more
Anyway... Joyce Carol Oates is one of my favorite authors, and she did not let me down. Her characters are so utterly vivid, you f...more
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