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Sleep Before Evening by Magdalena Ball (eBook)
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Quantity in Basket:
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Code: 978-1-904492-97-9
Price: £1.00
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Marianne is teetering at
the edge of reason.
A death in the family sends
her brilliant academic career and promising future spiraling out of control
until resentment towards those who shaped her past leads her on a wild and desperate
search for the truth about herself.
On the seedy side of New
York, she meets Miles, a hip musician busking the streets and playing low-rent
venues in a muddled bid to make his own dreams come true.
In her new life, she finds
anarchic squalor, home grown music and poetry, booze, drugs, sex, violence,
love, loss
and, above all, exhilarating freedom on her troubled journey
from sleep to awakening.
This gritty, relentless
story unfolds with the same cool detachment that motivates the central character
to peel back the layers of her life and expose the painful scalding within.
Read
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Reviews:
| Its been a while
since Ive read a literary young adult novel, especially one about
a fall into drug addiction. Magdalena Balls Sleep Before Evening,
published by Be Write Books, was a great way to return to the genre.
When the grandfather
of seventeen-year old scholarship student Marianne dies while playing
chess with her, his death is the last cord holding her in her normal life.
Her grandfather has been the only constant loving figure in her life.
Her mother, Lily, loves her of course. She and Lily have a good relationship,
but Lilys second husband has just left the family, abandoning Marianne
just as her father did years earlier.
Grief and abandonment
is tough for any teenager but when Mari encounters Miles, a somewhat older,
self-destructive drug-addicted musician, the reader knows its only
a matter of time before Maris life takes a downward spiral. Mari,
unfortunately, is a kid and not as wise as the cynical reader. Very slowly,
as if on a determined path, Mari goes from premarital sex with this guy
to cocaine and heroin addiction. Its a story about how drugs, sex,
and grief can work together in a great choreography of subtle evil to
deprive a lonely innocent soul of her willpower.
Mari is a scholarship
student who loves music and poetry. Her love of the arts is reflected
in the poetically written book and in the way famous lines of poetry often
jumps into her memory as a way of explaining her life. Thus, as certain
elements of art call her to destruction, other aspects also try to save
her. There are also memories of her grandfather, whose death Mari cannot
quite accept because her mother allowed the hospital to cut off the life
support. In the end, however, Maris mother does not stop her support
for her.
Mari is a typical
teenager in many ways. Naïve in many ways, living by and through
art (classical and modern), and unable to speak about her emotional needs.
Its always hard for an adult writer to create such a character.
So often angsty teenagers are clichéd or unlikable or they just
seem plain unreal.
Here, however, the
author does a good job. There were times I wanted to shake Mari because
she reminded me of know-it-all teenagers who think they are free from
danger. Other times I remembered my younger days when being allowed to
hang out with older trendy types seemed like the greatest thing that could
happen to a person.
The story takes place
in the past, in the Reagan era, but it doesnt feel nostalgic or
old-fashioned. Its geographical setting is New York City, my old haunt.
Magdalena ball does a great job in showing the dangers of the New York
art scene. This is not a book about someone falling into debauchery and
those folks who like a happy read shouldnt buy it. Its a triumphant
book and teenagers will like it, although they may react differently to
many of the poetic passages.
Carole
McDonnell
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| It took
a little while for me to get into this novel, but once I was, I realised
the power contained in the depiction of drug addiction and general abjectness.
Marianne Cotton is a substantial, complex character, one who will stay with
me ... a very good first novel.
Marianne is playing
chess with her grandfather Eric when he has a stroke. His death begins
her spiral into a painful place, abandoning all she has known for a bitter
world full of false pleasures and promises. She is only seventeen, and
a good student, with a promising future. But her alternate journey is
one of sex, drugs and blues, a seedy world that she may or may not be
able to escape.
the
wordy gecko
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Marianne Cotton is
a straight A student. Her loving grandfather provides the constant support
of a caring father figure while her bipolar mother flaunts around the
country chasing her dream of becoming a successful artist. But when her
grandfather dies of an unexpected stroke and her mother's marriage falls
apart, Marianne finds her stunning academic career unraveling and her
prosperous future darkening. Marianne meets an exotic street music performer,
Miles, who introduces her to the lures of the lower east side. Marianne's
private school scholarship becomes unimportant and her easygoing teenage
life is thrown away for one of sex, drugs and murky music clubs. Through
Miles' music, freedom and connections Marianne opens her eyes to the depths
and shadows of New York's rugged and dangerous inner city scene.
This was a harrowing
and believable book, which I actually really enjoyed! Magdalena Ball writes
with such conviction and describes even the grittiest scenes with their
own kind of beauty that makes this novel hard to put down. Having never
read anything quite like this book before, I was dubious at the beginning.
However, upon finishing the novel, I realized that I had been living as
Marianne, experiencing her loss, grief and struggles. I lived the painful
emotion behind the words of the narrator while sharing the experiences
and feelings of Marianne; this sets the book apart. I would definitely
recommend Sleep Before Evening to others but possibly to those older than
myself. Throughout the novel Marianne is faced with the daunting trials
of drug addiction, sex and the fight for survival in the big city. While
I thoroughly enjoyed the book, I think it might be better suited to people
from 16 up. The words of Magdalena Ball in Sleep Before Evening will without
a doubt stay with me for years to come.
SMill,
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia,Flamingnet Student Book Reviewer
Reviewer
Age: 14
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| Maggie
Ball is a guest poster on this site (Boychick
Lit), and I hope she noticed the hazing that our colleague Craig Alan
Williamson got on these pages for his college comedy. Welcome
to the boys club, Maggie. But we were expecting you to bring the fun
and games. Instead, we get grief, from a woman who is both a looker and
a thinker.
Chick lit, its
not, convenient as that would have been for the sake of contrast to the
boychik variety. No, what we have here is a full-on rush of ambitious
literary fiction. That it largely succeeds as such is no consolation to
horny but bookish males hoping for a bit of fluff or a few chuckles while
killing time in the airport departure lounge.
Her central character,
seventeen-year-old Marianne Cotton, doesnt have a problemshe
has onion-like layers of themeach drawing its quota of weeping as
it is rudely stripped off to reveal more of the same beneath. And she
seemed like such a nice, bright girl from the burbs, most likely to succeed,
even if shes headed for the success-starved achievements of the
liberal arts.
It all starts when
Mariannes godlike grandfather, who is her chess master and father-substitute,
croaks. No clean death, this. He suffers a devastating stroke (as she
watches) and lingers on painlessly (for him) until his tormented daughter
(Mariannes mother Lily) decides to pull the plug. Except she doesnt
bother to ask Marianne. Thats major life crisis number one (unless
you count the time her natural father took a hike when she was three).
To this point, Marianne
has been an A-student out on politely competitive Long Island, bound for
NYU with a scholarship and earnest plans to major in music. (Grandpa was
fond of quoting Wittgenstein to her, so we guess she will also minor in
philosophy with no strain.)
Propelled by her grief
over the loss of the only sane man in her life, Marianne goes into socioeconomic
free-fall. It seems all she has to do is set foot on the Long Island Railroad
and inevitably shes spiraling down into the rock music and drug
culture of lower Manhattan. A creepy-sexy harmonica player named Miles
is her undoing, and he does a helluva job, deflowering her and getting
her hooked on horse, not necessarily in that order (or maybe simultaneouslyshe
doesnt seem to notice or care).
Life as a junkie and
a wannabe groupie isnt glamorous or fun, although at times Marianne
seems to think its all she deserves. She delights in high-life sex
with Miles, although unfortunately for voyeuristic male readers, we have
to take her word for ittheres no graphic content here.
What follows for much
of the book is a whipsawing of agony and ecstasy as Marianne struggles
to scrape up enough cash to cop and occasionally also eat. Bukowski comes
to mindno glamorous existence there, either. (Some practitioners
of fratire dont seem to grasp this, fascinated as they seem to be
with the puke on their own shoes. Ah, well.)
Oh, its an artful
whipsawing, in that the narrative respects the rhythms of the readers
expectations. Just when we think Marianne will get smart and win back
some self respect, she gets knocked down, someone dies, she gets a bad
dose, she catches her boyfriend in flagrante with the band hag, and so
on. (Fiction isnt life. In its contrived worlds, as in the movies,
people rise, suffer, and die on cue, even to a beat. It has to be that
wayart is artifice, after all.)
Just when Marianne
has been beaten to a bloody pulp, she winds up in rehab, and there begins
the arduous climb back toward reconciliation with her mother and the middle
class. Late in the book as she starts to spill it in psychotherapy, we
begin to appreciate (as she does) what precipitated her fall. Up until
now, shes blamed the inept other men in her lifeher father
and her mothers subsequent string of loser lovers, along with the
infamous Miles and an all-male cast of criminals, dope dealers, and sleazy
employers.
But here comes the
epiphany: All along shes been disappointed by the lack of love and
attention from her mother, a self-absorbed painter with a manic-depressive
lifestyle. Mariannes image of herself has been reflected through
her mothers neuroses, and they both have to get through, and past,
that core issue.
So, relax, guys. You
may be crass, sleazy, opportunistic, and inept. But youre not at
fault.
This time, you'll
have to let the women work it out.
Boychick
Lit
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| I've never
been addicted to drugs, but first-time novelist Magdalena Ball in Sleep
Before Evening made me feel as if I had been so, in New York, way back in
1982. When Marianne's grandfather dies, her innocence disappears with him
and she abandons her potential academic career in an effort to find herself
and re-establish some much needed stability in her life. All this happens
while falling in love, learning about sex, drugs, booze and homeless life,
and generally growing up far too quickly with plenty of freedom. The year
1982, a year of torment in the life of sweet Marianne. She's brave yet she
manages to reach the bottom. Will she climb back up?
The characters are
the reason I love this book. Their dependence on drugs and their all too
human feelings come out vividly. Miles, for instance, might look like
the typical bad guy at the bar but he's real all the way through. His
feelings for Marianne and his addictions, hopes, dreams and sometimes
even violence are straight-in-your-face all throughout the book.
The writing is deep
and memorable making the novel a true page-turner. The words are chosen
masterly; the narrative and the imagery are excellent. The book sounds
like the music Marianne wants to compose. The frequent flashes from the
past complement the narrative and add a certain element of mystery to
the story.
The peak of the story
is carefully reached, with the reader being let down and thinking it was
reached quickly when in fact it was not. Indeed, not even Marianne was
convinced by her earlier sudden decision to turn her life around.
Sleep Before Evening
is a well-written insight into addiction and the ugly life. A seemingly
good girl can be able to let go so much and be thrown in with the most
'bad'. But if you want to know what happens to Marianne and all the other
characters in Sleep Before Evening, you'll have to read the book!
Maressa
Zahra
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Sleep Before Evening
is the story of a brilliant young woman who, after experiencing a death
in the family, abandons the promise of her academic career for a desperate
search within herself. Her new life is immersed in the dark side of New
York, in all its squalor, booze, drugs, sex, violence, poetry, and original
music. Despite the dangers, she braves morass for its stimulating freedom,
and the opportunity to burrow underneath the layers of her life and uncover
the inner pain that hurts so badly. A haunting and absorbing narrative
of trying self-discovery.
Margaret's
Bookshelf
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This is a first novel
by Magdalena Ball, author of The Art of Assessment and a collection of
poetry, Quark Soup. She is also creator and editor of the Web's premier
literary site, The Compulsive Reader.
Mari and her mother Lily form the nucleus of the novel. Mari is a brilliant,
but limited, high school student. She has a scholarship to NYU and is
an accomplished pianist. Her father faded away from his family early in
her life and she has found a substitute in her grandfather, Eric.
Her mother, Lily, has remarried. She is an artist, subject to mood swings
that are exhausting to Russ, her husband, and to Mari. Lily in fact drives
Russ away by the jealousy that torments her.
Eric has a stroke that is severe enough to leave him unconscious and without
brain activity. His doctor recommends the removal of life support. Mari
is opposed to this and insists at least that she be made part of the decision
respecting her grandfather. Lily and Russ agree to this, but decide without
her and Eric is gone before Mari knows what has happened.
In an already difficult home Mari now experiences the extremes of alienation
from her mother. Accustomed to visit the city at her pleasure, Mari begins
to visit it more frequently. She meets Miles, a young street musician
and, cast off and vulnerable, begins a relationship with him. A large
part of the book becomes concerned with sex and drugs and - well, not
rock and roll exactly - blues.
Ball is very good at showing the shabby musicians that alternate between
hopes and disappointments. Miles, the harmonica player, and Cath, the
singer, and the other band members lead lives of noisy desperation with
a heavy dependence on drugs. In this environment Mari becomes addicted.
This is a remarkable novel, not one detail of which rings false. The setting
is New York City and one of its suburbs and the time is the Reagan years.
Ball has achieved the remarkable in recovering this particular time past
and the drive of the narrative makes this a compelling and an exciting
book.
Bob
Williams
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| In her debut
novel Sleep Before Evening, Magdalena Ball probes into the psychic
maze of teenage delinquency. The book shows the angst of the heroine Marianne
Cotton, a 17-year old girl of artistic aptitude, who grapples with the emptiness
of life by resorting to drugs and ends up close to death. From the death
of her affectionate grandfather to the nearly fatal drug overdose, Mariannes
life instantiates the pattern of disrupted attachment that underlies most
(if not all) cases of juvenile delinquency. It is a fictional but thoroughly
investigative case study of the tenderest age of life and the elements that
render its disintegration.
Set in the year 1982,
Sleep Before Evening is a an engaging character-driven narrative,
focusing on the images, speech, feelings, and dreams of Marianne, turning
the inside of her mind out for the readers to explore. The emerging talent
of her artistic spirit is checked by the death of her mentor-her grandfather-and
her mothers failure to provide the necessary love and care. Soon
Mariannes quest for peace and human attachment begins, carrying
her astray like a detached leaf in a wild wind. The authors control
of the story is masterly; her insight combining with her exceptional narrative
skills to write a story that presents the case of millions of young drug
addicts, right here amidst us.
Sleep Before Evening
is certainly more than a novel. It is an honest piece of commentary on
familial and societal elements that tear apart the tender fabric of innocence
off youngsters lives. Marianne comes to the readers as the true
picture of loneliness, her survival resting on the development of a human
connection. Yet, her failure to find one in a crowded city because people
are insecurely and frantically looking for career, fame, and money, is
a thought-provoking tragedy. Whether or not she comes out these tempestuous
waters is a separate issue; the need to understand her, look for her in
our homes and lives, and help her out of her throes is crucial to our
own survival as humans on this planet.
Ernest
Dempsey
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| Life isnt
perfect, but seventeen-year-old Marianne Cotton is blessed with a loving
and devoted grandfather who carefully schools her in piano, the arts, and
literature. An A student, Marianne basks in his attention while
eclipsing memories of her deadbeat dad. Lily Cotton, Mariannes self-involved,
bipolar mother, loves her daughter within her own limitations. The needy
artist frequently requires tending when moods swing, forcing Marianne to
table her own needs and emotions to care for her. A series of men has invaded
their lives, providing a less than perfect environment for Marianne.
The brilliant young
woman manages to survive until her senior year in high school, when just
before finals, Eric Cotton collapses into a vegetative state. Although
Marianne is convinced her grandfather is still alive inside, the decision
to pull the plug is made by Lily and her current husband, Russell. Marianne
interprets this act as a deep betrayal, and reels in shock when shes
notified that her grandfather has been removed from life support.
Magdalena Balls
writing, insightful and deep, engages the reader from page one. Her characters
linger long after the story resolves to its perfect conclusion. Highly
recommended for a glimpse into the motivations behind heroin abuse, as
well as thoroughly alluring family drama, Sleep Before Evening
is powerfully addictive in its own right.
Aaron
Paul Lazar, Author of the LeGarde
Mystery Series
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I tend to read novels
in one of two ways. If I don't like it, I stop after about 30 minutes
and don't touch it again. If I like it, I can't stop until I've finished.
Sleep Before Evening falls into the latter category for me.
It is a moving, gripping
and gritty story of many different kinds of love, loss and addiction.
The sordid world of heroin addiction is set against a background of chess,
poetry, music and art to create a strong storyline. But the use of language
and imagery in this novel are also fantastic.
Sarah
James
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| The tale
opens with seventeen year old Marianne and her grandfather Dr. Cotton playing
chess and chatting as grandfathers and grandchildren will. Without warning
Grandpa topples from his chair. Mari is sure he is teasing as Grandpa is
wont to do. This time it is different. This time it is not Grandpa teasing,
this time it is a stroke which has left Eric Cotton with no brain activity.
From that beginning we follow Lily, Mariannes melodrama driven mother,
an artist who is lost in her painting, Russell Wilkinson the second husband,
and Marianne.
Eric Cotton, writer,
philosopher, and speaker has been a mainstay of love, hope and stability
for music prodigy Mari. Without him Mari feels her life is whirling without
direction. Lilys manic behavior, depression and suspicion begin
to wear on them all. Russell leaves, Mari sets out on her own, finds a
boy friend, drugs, sex, violence, loss, a job and an invigorating sense
of freedom; life Mari had not anticipated spirals relentlessly onward.
Twelve Step, Lily replaces Russell and Maris pain continues. Lily
and Mari begin a tenuous tentative try at adult relationship. Before her
life can progress toward a positive, fulfilling plane Marianne meets with
a committee to decide her fate. The outcome of the meeting is a surprise
for Mari and satisfying for the reader who is left with the feeling that
some good can come even from pain, loss and prior hopelessness.
On the pages of Sleep
Before Evening Writer Magdalena Ball presents her debut novel and
what a read it is! The reader is caught up in the narrative immediately
as we sit with Marianne and her grandfather in the tranquility of a chess
game overlooking Long Island Sound. Within a short time seventeen year
old Marianne is tottering on the brink of disaster, the death of her grandfather
has taken away the life line to which she has been clinging for most of
her life and with it her anticipation for encouragement, understanding
and adult leadership and has sent her into a miasma from which she will
have trouble extricating herself. Her fine academic work to that point
as well a promising musical future are sent into a disastrous downward
whirl leading to nothing worthwhile until Maris understandable bitterness
aimed at those who were instrumental in shaping her past propels the teen
on a frantic search for the reality that is herself.
The reader is provided
an emotion charged peek into the awfulness of drug addiction and comes
away with an understanding for how addiction CAN happen to anyone and
can rocket onward even to a point of no return. For Marianne she was able
to hit bottom, find the help she needed and begin to raise herself up
and out of the depths she had plunged.
Sleep Before Evening
is a riveting and fast moving coming of age story dealing both with the
attractive as well as the revolting aspects of anguish suffered by many
who have fragile inner strength to guide them in their search for discovering
who they truly are. Marianne at 17 is intelligent although she has learned
to withdraw into herself as protection against the craziness of her family
peopled with a childish, bemused pretty self centered mother, absentee
father, patient but fed up step father, loss of the grandparents who had
provided a steadying rock to which Mari might cling. Writer Ball presents
plausible dialogue which become at times gritty and tart, well-fleshed
characters who very well may be people we all have known; smiles, pleasantries,
warts, foibles and all. The horrors of dependence and torpidity of drug
scenes are portrayed in stark realism.
Sleep Before Evening
is a must read for the high school literature reading list, the public
and high school library, the personal reading shelf as well as the counselor
and therapists collection of books to loan to the students and clients
with whom they are working. This is one of the books I will be suggesting
to our school counselor.
Molly
Martin, Bookpleasures.com
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| Magdalena
Ball's Sleep Before Evening recounts a year in the life of 17-year-old
Marianne, gifted pianist and straight-A student. A dazzling future lies
ahead of her with a full scholarship to NYU as a stepping-stone. Then life
rears its fickle head: her beloved grandfather dies, and her mother's unpredictable
manic moods leave her feeling disoriented and betrayed. Seeking refuge on
the anonymous streets of lower Manhattan's west side, she meets the beguiling
twentysomething Miles who offers her comfort and the sweet taste of oblivion.
And so begins a young
girl's dark journey into night as she takes her first baby steps on the
downward spiral of drug addiction. Though the reader might surely want
to look away (as this one did), Ball does not. She renders every graphic
detail in vivid color and with a fine, unflinching brush. We go with Marianne
as she graduates from pot to heroin and pipe to needle. We follow close
behind as she crawls willingly into the unthinkable places only hardcore
addicts go. We watch her life predictably unravel, and Ball creates such
a feeling of intimacy that we feel with Marianne, not just for her.
Magdalena Ball demonstrates
her mastery of the musicality of language and many scenes are imbued with
striking imagery. Though the early scenes with Miles seem to follow romance
plot formula, I surmised later on that Ball is telling the story always,
and correctly, from Marianne's viewpoint, and of course, her experience
of the world -- before her headlong plunge into the dark side of it --
is innocent, seen through the eyes of a young romantic, and the writing
reflects her transition from child to adult.
As the drama coils
tighter and tighter, it is this quality of writing that keeps the reader
utterly glued. As Marianne struggles with her demons and we almost hold
our breath as she nears her eighteenth birthday, Magdalena Ball's Sleep
Before Evening shows us that in order to find yourself, you sometimes
have to lose yourself first.
Cathy
Biribauer, Rose &
Thorns
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Once you start reading
Marianne's tragic story you will not be able to finish. I read this book
for 4 start hours. It was like the story took me over. The book connects
to you the way Thirteen did. It is moving and harsh and every word seemed
true. I thought it was a great read.
Bria
Phillips
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This is a well written,
absorbing and fast moving coming of age story involving the ugliness and
beauty of life. Marianne at 17 is a very clever girl but also a bit of
a loner. When her much loved grandfather and friend dies she becomes more
isolated and confused with her parents and school. In a year we clearly
see the disasters of the downward spiralling path she follows, and it
is a wonder that she survives. Her sense of self and loss are deeply felt
by the reader ... she makes the decision to reclaim life and with the
help of love and music matures with wisdom, insight, and conscious understanding
of herself.
Margaret
Broughton
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The writing is exquisite,
without ever calling attention to itself, which is a real feat. It is
a pleasure to read. The pitch is perfect and the characters are so beautifully
developed and very intriguing.
Joan
Schweighardt, author of Virtual Silence, Island, Homebodies and
Gudrun's Tapestry
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Sleep Before Evening
is music. Magdalena Ball weaves the sounds of poetry with an important
story, compassionately 'sung'.
Carolyn
Howard-Johnson, author of This is the Place and Tracings
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There is so much beautiful
writing here, soaring passages.
Ruhama
Veltfort, author of The Promised Land
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The dialogue is solid
and believable, and the characters live and breathe and scratch themselves.
The drug scenes and the horrors of dependence are especially well-rendered.
Chad
Hautmann, author of Billie's Ghost
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| Sleep
Before Evening is Magdalena Ball's debut novel. It is a beautifully
crafted piece dealing with rejection and betrayal. Those of us who have
felt that someone we loved deeply betrayed us, will form an immediate bond
with the main character.
Marianne is a vivacious
nineteen year old, full of life and a brilliant scholar. She is at the
peak of her powers when life decides it will test her character. Eric,
her much loved grandfather and mentor, is suddenly struck down by a stroke.
His death begins a series of events that takes Marianne into a world of
darkness, filled with drugs and depression.
Hurting to the core
about the loss of Eric, and the fact that she was denied the chance to
say goodbye, Marianne hates the world. She also starts to hate herself
and seeks solace in the arms of Miles. He is a struggling musician who
for a time is the maestro who conducts her life.
Lily, Marianne's mother,
also has her own demons eating at her. She is so wrapped up in her struggle
to find happiness and fulfillment, that she cannot see what is happening
to her daughter. It is a flaw that many parents are guilty of, not through
an act of selfishness, but one brought on by their own struggle to survive.
Confused and angry
Marianne deteriorates to the stage where fantasy, reality and pain are
so intermingled within her, that she loses contact with her real self.
She was entering the stage of what the noted British psychiatrist Hall
called, drifting back to the time before you are born. It is a stage along
the path of mental recovery, where one's mind is in an infantile state,
as it retreats from the hurt it finds itself in. Then when it feels strong
enough it comes forward again, out of the darkness and into the light.
This usually brings with it a positive change in an individual, making
them mentally stronger and enhancing their creativity.
This is a good story
that makes the reader feel the highs and lows of Marianne as if they are
their own. It reminds me of the style adopted by the Russian writer Dostoyevsky.
He had the ability to get the reader to feel exactly what his characters
felt; a gift Magdalena ball has too.
Sleep Before Evening
is a well written insight into human suffering. The author shows an in-depth
knowledge of how to hold readers attention, and make them eager to know
more. This is a debut novel that shows the author has many more novels
inside her, which will provoke strong emotions in readers of her work.
Warren
Thurston, Owner of Pentales
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