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url 2019-03-01 13:41
Tabitha King totally rocks!
The Book of Reuben - Tabitha King

This reminds me of the time when the company I work for was trying to encourage more women in the workplace. Diane Patrick was invited to speak. She is a senior counsel, an advocate for women's rights, and charity spokesperson.

 

She was introduced to us as the wife of the Governor of Massachusetts.

 

I sometimes wonder what century I'm living in.

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review 2016-08-27 20:00
THE BOOK OF REUBEN Review
The Book of Reuben: 2a Novel - Tabitha King

I first read this book in early 2015 and did not care for it. By that point I'd read almost all of Tabitha King's catalogue and had grown to appreciate and enjoy her writing style. (No, she doesn't write like her husband at all, nor would I want her to.) Most of her books are set in the fictitious town of Nodd's Ridge, Maine, a small community where everyone knows each other and no local scandal goes unnoticed. The five Nodd's Ridge books — Caretakers, The Trap, Pearl, One on One, and The Book of Reuben — revolve around a set cast of characters with a few variables thrown in. King's books are very much character-oriented; she explores in depth the people of this town she's created. The reader gets up-close and personal looks at the happenings, both good and ugly.

 

When I read The Book of Reuben for the first time my life was pretty hectic. I was nearing the end of a stressful college semester and I was about to undergo surgery on my back. I simply was not in a positive or steady state of mind. I wasn't open to a book about ugly people with ugly problems, facing real life horrors like infidelity and the Vietnam War draft. Therefore, I had quite the adverse reaction to this one. I got 2/3 of the way in and couldn't take anymore. I gave up on it, and almost gave up on King's writing altogether. She paints pictures of struggle and fear so well . . . her novels are almost too much to take, sometimes.

 

Fast forward to the present. I am nearing the end of the initial stage of my college career, and plans for my future are much sturdier and clearer. I'm no longer making trips to Birmingham every other week for consultations with specialists. I've been in two serious relationships — one great, one horrible — and have put myself together after both. In short, I'm in a better place. So I decided to reread The Book of Reuben, and give it a fair shake. Am I glad I did; I enjoyed it much more this time around.

 

This book acts as the prequel to both Pearl and One On One, and takes place in roughly the same timeframe as Caretakers and The Trap. Reuben Styles, the protagonist of the story, wants nothing more than to find happiness, but he somehow always creates hurdles for himself. This is very much a coming-of-age story. Set against the backdrop of the tumultuous '60s and '70s and the reformation decade that is the '80s, the reader sees Reuben grow and work hard and fall in and out of love. He's an average, blue collar man in a small town where everyone knows him, for good or bad. I love this guy so much. I love him in every Tabitha King novel in which he appears, and I wish King would write again — if only to give us an update on how this man is doing after all these years.

 

This is a tough, raunchy, and real novel. It isn't for the faint of heart. It explores the joys and woes of sex, the pain of alcoholism, the dangers of fervent religiosity. There's divorce and physical altercations. There is heartbreak. There is financial ruin. It isn't pretty — these are rough, backwoods people who don't live easy lives — but it's a necessary and rewarding read. King's grasp of character is awe-inspiring, and her poetic prose is stunning. This is story worthy reading, and reading again. Highly recommended.

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text 2016-08-24 05:05
Reading progress update: I've read 1 out of 368 pages.
The Book of Reuben: 2a Novel - Tabitha King

I read (most of) this book last year, and even wrote a review on it — but I did not finish it. My reading was interrupted by a surgery I underwent at that time, and I never actually finished The Book of Reuben. Tabitha King is one of my favorite authors (and not because she happens to be married to one of my other favorite authors), so I want to finally give this book its due. 

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review 2015-09-05 22:14
SURVIVOR Review
Survivor - Tabitha King

SynopsisA beautiful photographer is driving home one night when a car swerves past her and kills two pedestrians. Although she escapes the accident without harm, she has trouble shaking off the after effects...and comes to unsettling crossroads in her life. Soon she marries a local hockey star whose raucous lifestyle leads to a divorce. Then a scheming local cop, who has pursued her since the accident, takes advantage of her, and she marries again...and falls into a near-fatal mistake! 

 

What happened to Tabitha King? Specifically, what happened to Tabitha King between 1988 and 1993? 1988 saw the publication of Pearl, Stephen King's wife's fourth novel and (in my opinion) her crowning achievement. A sublime meditation on small-town life and personal achievement, I finished that book in two days with tears in my eyes and a new sense of optimism about my fellow friends and neighbors. It was one of those books -- the kind that sticks with you forever. That's not to say the books that came before that one weren't good -- quite the opposite, in fact. Small World, while obviously a debut novel, is a fun and imaginative sci-fi tale with two very memorable main characters. Caretakers, King's second novel, fully shows her growth and maturation as a writer. The Trap is perhaps the closest Tabby King comes to actual "horror" (for some reason, most folks assume Mrs. King writes scary stories because of who her spouse is), but it is her own thing. 

 

However... after 1988, Mrs. King took a 5-year hiatus from writing. I don't know why -- maybe she just wasn't feeling inspired at the time. Maybe she lost her confidence from being in the shadows of her husband. Both of these reasons are completely valid. I'm not sure if either of those reasons are why she stopped writing for so long, but whatever the cause... she changed in those years. 1993's One On One, the closest King comes to young adult fiction, introduced a few things that would plague all of her work throughout the '90s -- namely uninteresting/idiotic male characters, insanely emotional/irrational female characters, and an utter fixation on sex. Seriously -- there is a reference to it (usually as crude and indiscreet as possible) on almost every page, if not every page, in One On OneThe Book of Reuben, and Survivor. If her characters ain't throwing dishes or beating each other, they're hitting the sheets and wondering why sex (usually unprotected and as nasty as possible) is causing so many problems... so, naturally, the only solution is more sex. The sex is usually followed by verbal abuse, one of the two leaving, then coming back, rinse and repeat for 400 pages. Seriously, folks. I am not exaggerating.

 

Now, I am, by no means, a prude. I am a 19 years old college guy. I like to think of myself as a very open-minded, non-prudey fellow who doesn't mind sex in literature at all... if it's written well and/or has a point. Tabitha King's characters constantly use sex to get revenge on one another, to scorn other lovers (because literally everybody in her books has affairs), et cetera. It gets tiresome, and that's why it took me so long to read this book. I got tired of the abuse and maliciousness of these horrible people King has created. And yes, I get it -- there are real people out there like this. People use sex for power all of the time. People are hurtful and mean, and sadly... Tabby has probably painted a portrait of some actual folks in the world. However, I -- personally -- don't enjoy reading about people who have no real problems constantly creating problems for themselves and then wondering why they have problems. That's that ish I don't like.

 

On the flip-side, there are some things I really did like about this story. I liked Kissy's strong nature, and I absolutely loved Tabby's prose.  Tabitha King could author a book of poetry and I'd buy that sucker in a flash. The first 100 or so pages were really good, and I was tricked at first into thinking Survivor was going to be better than The Book of Reuben. Both are probably equally bad, but I think I might actually like TBOR a tiny bit more if only because that book is a continuation of the Nodd's Ridge series and featured characters I already liked (albeit, they were fairly destroyed and wrangled unrecognizable in said book). 

 

I wanted to like this book more than I actually did, and I'm sad I didn't enjoy it a whole lot because I know what Mrs. King is capable of. It's a shame she didn't publish another book after this for nine years, but maybe in that span of time she lost her utter fascination with sex and instead went back to writing spell-binding characters with depth and emotion. That book is, of course, Candles Burning which I will get to soon-ish. If you've never read Tabitha King before, do as I did and start with Small World and work your way out from there. This book isn't horrible, and in fact was quite good in a lot of places... but it's not one I'll ever come back to. 

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text 2015-09-03 18:50
Reading progress update: I've read 380 out of 433 pages.
Survivor - Tabitha King

Because of school and work I have been working on this novel for over a week. It's not bad, but not great either. It falls prey to many problems Tabitha King's writing had in the '90s, which I'll go into detail about in my full length review. I'm glad to almost be finished.

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