Belong to Me by Marisa de los Santos

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(Hardcover)

Average Customer Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5 (21 ratings)

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  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Pub. Date: April 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9780061240270
  • Sales Rank: 1,400
  • 390pp
 
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Synopsis

Everyone has secrets. Some we keep to protect ourselves, others to protect those we love.

A devoted city dweller, Cornelia Brown surprised herself when she was gripped by the sudden desire to head for an idyllic suburb. Though she knows she's made the right move, she approaches her new life with trepidation and struggles to forge friendships. Cornelia's mettle is quickly tested by judgmental neighbor Piper Truitt, the embodiment of everything Cornelia feared she would find in suburbia. A saving grace soon appears in the form of Lake, and Cornelia develops an instant bond with this warm yet elusive woman.

As their individual stories unfold, the women become entangled in a web of trust, betrayal, love and loss that challenges them in ways they never imagined, and that ultimately teaches them what it means for one human being to belong to another.

Redbook

Smart, funny writing about the risks we take for love.

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Biography

An award-winning poet and critically acclaimed novelist, Marisa de los Santos lives in Wilmington, Delaware, with her husband and children.

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Customer Reviews

Number of Reviews: 21
Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5
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Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5 Belong to Me
PuNiaoPuNiao, ReadEffectivelyAndDiscover.blogspot, 06/29/2008

It seems petty to say anything really negative about Belong To Me, American author Marisa de los Santos's follow-up to her best-selling debut novel. Like Audrey Niffenegger's The Time Traveler’s Wife, Belong To Me is well-written popular fiction, a creature so rare that all examples should immediately be granted star billing in Oprah's Book Club. The novel's characters are fully fleshed creatures, flaws and all, a definite step above the vapid, one dimensional casts of chick lit novels. Yet, these characters, despite their Everyman or Everywoman trappings, are also obvious romanticisations of what people are like in real life: kind, well-meaning, funny, able to hold good conversations and even physically attractive, though the author takes care to make them self-deprecating as well. Cornelia is a petite city girl - 'I'm five feet tall and weigh about as much as your average sack of groceries' - who faces acclimatization difficulties upon moving to a Pennsylvanian suburb with her husband Teo, a drop-dead gorgeous but modest oncologist. His habitual response to the scores of women who gawk at his beauty on a daily basis is to 'blush-duck-smile'. Then, there is their mean neighbor, Piper, a Stepford Wife blonde who chides Cornelia for her dying hydrangea bush and quirky sense of humor (she thinks Cornelia's just pretentious). But as it soon turns out, her briskness is simply a cover for her deep despair as she nurses her best friend who is dying of cancer. Then there is Dev, the precocious 14-year-old new kid on the block who suffered dreadfully at this mediocre Californian school, but who blossoms at his new Pennsylvanian charter school where he meets other brainy but cool kids - the kind who rave about Charles Darwin's Origin Of Species and Emily Dickinson's poems, but who also do regular teenage things such as rake leaves, drink hot chocolate and say 'man'. How the lives of these three people and those near and dear to them develop and eventually collide makes up the page-turner of a plot. There is even a Desperate Housewives moment involving a confrontation in a yoga class over rumors about someone sleeping with someone. And in the end, after a few melodramatic and literally life-changing events and revelations, everyone essentially lives happily ever after, any residual conflict ironed away by the characters' essentially noble, generous personalities. Barring her tendency to romanticize her characters to the point of sappiness, the author is wonderful at conveying personality, relying not just on adjectives but on telling turns of phrase and anecdotes. She also has a knack for hitting the nail on the head when it comes to capturing certain nameless emotions, such as how walking through a city makes Cornelia feels bigger: 'Imagine an enormous strutting peacock with the whole jeweled city for a tail.' Also, even though this is a sequel of sorts, it never reads like one, with the returning characters' backgrounds introduced organically. Even though some of them do pop up abruptly, the overall effect is not awkward. In the end, the experience of reading Belong To Me is a pleasurable mix of both anxious anticipation and guaranteed satisfaction: You'll find yourself hoping that everything will turn out well for these lovely, decent people, even though you already know that the author would never have it otherwise.

Also recommended: The Time Traveller's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger. In this similarly sentimental novel, a man and his wife deal with the emotional repercussions of his uncontrollable habit of time-travelling to various points in their lives, both past and future.

Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 Great characters!
D.W., A reviewer, 06/27/2008

I got this book because it was recently featured in a B&N club. First I was struck by the cover. I loved it! So simple but colorful and symbolic for family life. When I started the story I was immediately attracted to the writing and the characters. The lines were lyrical but not complicated. The people in this neighborhood were real. They had secrets and problems and sometimes great losses but they were also funny and interesting. I wanted to meet them all. Next I will read the prequel and I hope there is a sequel. I'm a new fan!

Also recommended: The Art Of Racing In The Rain by Garth Stein

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