TITLE: She Poured Out Her Heart
AUTHOR: Jean Thompson
PUBLISHER: Blue Rider Press
PUBLISHING DATE: May 31, 2016
FROM GOODREADS: National Book
Award finalist Jean Thompson traces the complicated friendship of two
very different women who meet in college. In the tradition of her
bestselling novel The Year We Left Home, Thompson has crafted a novel of
remarkable psychological suspense, cast with the kinds of deeply
realized characters that have been heralded as “emotionally fluid” and
“deeply familiar.”
The night that Jane and Bonnie meet
on a college campus sets them on paths forever entwined. Bonnie, the
wild and experimental one, always up for anything, has spent the past
two decades bouncing between ill-fated relationships; while Jane, whose
seemingly perfect life, perfect husband, and perfect children appear to
have materialized out of a fantasy. But these appearances contradict the
quiet, inescapable doubt Jane feels about her life. One night, in the
middle of her own Christmas party, she steps outside into the snow,
removes her clothing and shoes, and lies down in the backyard. When she
is discovered, nothing is the same for anyone. As Jane begins to have
visions and retreat into a private inner world, Bonnie finds herself
drawn inevitably into an affair with Jane’s husband.
Thompson’s
mastery of complex emotion begets a novel of desire and the nature of
love—who we love, how we’re loved, and, most important, that we reach
urgently and always for a higher love, regardless of our circumstances.
She Poured Out Her Heart is a finely wrought, haunting story of female
friendship and deception, and the distance in between.
MY THOUGHTS:
I've been trying for
several days to figure out how to put this book into words and I'll
admit, it hasn't been easy. "She Poured Out Her Heart" focuses on Jane
and Bonnie, two best friends who met in college and stayed friends (of
sorts) throughout their journey into adulthood. Bonnie is the wild,
reckless type, who becomes a crisis intervention counselor working for
the Chicago Police and Jane becomes the housewife of a prominent doctor,
Eric, and has two children, one of which I feel is in some serious need
of more parenting. As a young child, Jane had some heart issues, and as
an adult, she goes to these "white" places in her head when stressed or
when she doesn't want to deal with things. Eric wants to find a medical
reason, but Jane sees these places as an escape and thinks she is
broken. I kept waiting for more development or explanation about this
but it never happened.
The characters in this book are seriously
messed up. Neither Jane nor Eric are happy in their marriage, and Bonnie
and Eric start an affair (not a spoiler - I read it in a preview
somewhere). Now I don't condone cheating (not that I'm a saint or
anything) but I grew up around it and really have no tolerance for it -
if you're unhappy, leave and if you don't want to leave, there must be
something there so try to make it work. However, that being said, the
only character I really liked in this book is Bonnie. Although she
starts a relationship with Jane's husband, and she is majorly flawed,
she owns her flaws and mistakes and I can respect the hell out of that
even if she is a cheater.
This book wasn't a bad read and I
really wanted to know what happened in the end. Though even though I
finished it several days ago, I still want to know what happened. The
ending doesn't really resolve anything and I can imagine these
characters living out the remainder of their lives in misery. Jane
doesn't show much growth in my opinion and well, Eric is just Eric
throughout - he likes hiding behind his work and somewhere in the
literary universe, I bet he is still doing so. I don't even feel sorry
for Jane because it's hard to show empathy for a character who doesn't
really realize how miserable and pathetic she really is at times.
This
isn't a bad read, but I don't really know what genre it appeals to so I
would just say if you like reading about dysfunctional people, then
give it a go - it will be right up your alley.
I received this book from the Penguin First to Read program in exchange for an honest review.
RATING: 3 PAWS
Sounds different, not really for me but glad you liked it some what...and I hate open endings. Though I guess it lets your imagination play.
ReplyDeleteIt does looks and sounds very intriguing, but it is not my kind of book. I am glad and happy you liked it though. Thank you for your great review and post!
ReplyDeleteWell, I'm certainly intrigued, Barb. I totally get why you didn't connect with Jane and it's interesting that the author didn't give her or Eric any emotional growth. I also get liking Bonnie. There's a lot to be said of a character who owns their flaws. I don't condone cheating either but it seems like Thompson used the cheating as a vehicle of sorts. Towards what, though? I am sorry you were left with having to wonder how things ended. I'm not really a fan of those sorts of endings. But it does say something about the book that days later you're still thinking about it. :)
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