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Livro que inspirou o filme estrelado por Viola Davis com roteiro de Gillian Flynn.
Dolly, Linda e Shirley não eram grandes amigas nem tinham nada em comum até que os maridos morrem juntos operando uma tentativa de assalto. Cada uma a seu modo está enfrentando o luto quando Dolly é surpreendida por descrições detalhadas de todos os roubos realizados e planejados pelo marido. Ela se vê diante de uma encruzilhada: pode se livrar daquilo tudo e voltar à sua vida pacata ou entregar a descoberta aos criminosos que querem tomar o lugar do falecido. Mas ninguém cogitaria sua aposta em uma terceira alternativa: recrutar as outras viúvas e concluir aquela última missão.
Sozinhas e sem experiência no mundo do crime, as três começam os preparativos para a operação, porém o caminho até o roubo perfeito não se mostra exatamente simples. Mesmo com o cenário ideal para o crime ideal, será que mulheres de luto conseguirão concretizá-lo?
Com protagonistas femininas fortes e uma narrativa intensa, As viúvas inspirou a adaptação com direção de Steve McQueen McQueen (12 Anos de Escravidão) e roteiro de Gillian Flynn. Protagonizado por Viola Davis e com grandes nomes no elenco, como Liam Neeson, Colin Farrell e Michele Rodriguez, o filme — já cotado para o Oscar — estreia no Brasil dia 29 de novembro.
485 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1983
So, here I am in the minority regarding this book. To start, I'll say I liked the cover. It's well done & appropriate for this title. I also enjoyed the introduction, which left me thinking, "Oh, I'm gonna enjoy this." Then in the 1st chapter everything got confusing. So many people. I couldn't quite keep it all straight, & found myself wondering if I might have gotten excited about the book prematurely. 2nd chapter, omg, how cliche can one be w/ cop characters? No need to even read this chapter. We all know our cliche cops. Chapter 3 I was hoping I might finally get some story & perhaps the book might redeem itself. No such luck. By that point I'd considered walking away from the book twice already. It was just a whole lot of nothing. Since I'd received it on promise of a review I felt obligated to at least push forward beyond the 3rd chapter. Had I gotten this book from any other source, I'd have chucked it right then. Press on I did, though.
Fast forward to chapter 9: How long does it take to get a bloody freaking car?! WTH?! WHY IS THIS STILL GOING ON! GET A DAMN CAR ALREADY! ----- Um, yeah, so I stopped reading in Chapter 9.
Here's the thing. I get that the premise of 3 crime widows finishing the jobs their husbands had lined up is a hot Hollywood premise. (Nothing really new here, but I mean, it's Hollywood. Safe & formulaic is what they do.) It's a good concept to pitch to that group of film makers, although I do wonder if it wasn't picked up b/c the current times are all about safe film projects w/ female leads to sell as "strong-females." (In other words, pandering.) No real problem so far, as relates to why this fit the bill the film industry was trying to fill. However, the book itself just sucked. Hard. So hard. Everything in it was so utterly flat. Story never took off. Ridiculous, undeveloped caricatures of characters. Final assessment is it was a fair concept with really crap execution, so that decent idea never landed. It died before it could even get off the ground. I'm really confused as to why so many people thought it was great. To say I was disappointed is an understatement. I was painfully bored, which is ever so much worse.
Sometimes a story is just not my thing & I can recommend it for other kinds of readers. That's not the case here. I didn't feel like I wasn't in the intended target readership. I just think it was bad work. Sad, but true. Wouldn't recommend it to anyone. Maybe the movie idea will be altered into something palatable. (They will prob. have to re-write nearly everything, but so be it.) One can hope.
