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L**T
An author to come "home" to...
After reading some good books and some okay books it is so niceto open up a new to me Catherine Ryan Hyde book. There are only excellent books with her name attached. She creates characters who become family, who hold up a mirror. She portrays "flawed" humanity with grace and empathy. She shows us the many faces of love. When I need a "pick me up" moment I pick up Catherine Ryan Hyde. What a gift her writing is. What a gift she is.
A**A
Good story.
I have enjoyed several of Catherine's Ryan Hyde's books. This one was a bit different but still a good read.
A**R
A needed break from mysteries and horror to unreliable narrators
The conversational way of writing in the first person allows the reader to see and feel the unique world of the protagonist. The conflicts are very real to life and one can easily picture that situation happening in our society. Meanwhile, she provides some positive commentary, and she successfully attempts normalization of the different ways families look today.
J**L
Intense, Sensitive, Heartwarming Story and Expert Writing Style
When good characterization and excellent plotting mix, the readers gain a Catherine Ryan Hyde book like The Language of Hoofbeats. I am still in awe of how the author brought to together--in perfection--all the loose ends and the character arcs, even those of Star and Clementine, the more disturbed of all the other characters.Although a bit on the original side, the story is about what makes a family and a community. The book begins with two women Jackie (a painter) and Paula (a veterinarian and an animal lover) who are legally married to each other, and who, having experienced negative input of their relationship, move to a small village in California with their adopted son Quinn and their two foster children, Star and Mando. Star is the latest addition to the family and Mando resents her for creating havoc in the otherwise well-adjusted family.Their next-door neighbor Clementine and her husband have a horse named Comet that used to belong to their now-dead daughter. Star forms a relationship with the high-strung Comet and seems to understand the horse’s frustration at the lack of care by his present owners; however, Clementine resents Star and chases her away from her property numerous times. Clementine is not only nasty to star but to her mothers Jackie and Paula, too. When Star steals Comet and they are both lost, the real action in the story commences. The rest, what happens to Mando, Star, Comet, and the other characters, readers have to read the book to find out.As to the characters, Clementine and Jackie are the two narrators of the story, each taking an alternating chapter to tell their side of the events. Clementine is a poor soul who is terribly damaged by her daughter’s suicide and her husband’s deserting her since he couldn’t take her anymore. The other people in the story are unique and carefully developed, including the secondary characters, and they are all portrayed with utmost care. Not just the characters but the important issues like the police, the judicial system, adoption, foster care, lesbianism, racism, mental illness, suicide, and desertion are also addressed with care and respect. The ending is a positive one, and I think no reader will be disappointed with this story.The setting as to the neighborhood and the town’s internal structure is described to perfection to match the author’s clear and beautiful writing style that hooks the reader right at the beginning and never releases until the last word.
A**H
Didn't want it to end
I love how this author I love how this author develops the characters. What a great story! I really appreciate how everything is not picture perfect but It tells a great story, Just like real life
M**R
The Language of Hoofbeats
This is a great novel about fostering troubled children. It is about relationships and communication and the impact the communication makes on others. I highly recommend this book.
K**R
Heartwarming ...
This is such a delightful read. I kept hated to stop reading whenever I needed to stop because I needed to be doing something else. Great writing and storyline. I think this would make a wonderful movie.
5**Y
Just Call Me Clementine
How am I supposed to react to my identification with the crankiest character in the book?! It’s a great story really, I always learn positive and meaningful things from Catherine’s books, her books really are a gift to me.
A**S
Language of hoof beats.
This was an ok read. I thought I'd enjoy it more and wish I did. Didn't find any of the characters particularly interesting and certainly not enough about the horse. At times the narrative is unnecessarily repetitive reminding us that she had mentioned a thought so trivial in the first place it didn't need reminding! This happened all the way through the book. I guessed the ending about three quarters through so no surprises. Have to say that I found the girl's name of Star annoying, not for me but at least I I finished it. The whole story held little action and rather far fetched all the way through.
C**Y
Thank you Catherine Ryan Hyde
I'd saved Language of Hoofbeats for a Christmas Day treat and it was indeed a treat to read.Immediate immersion into the world of Jackie and Paula (the mothers) Star (the recently fostered 15 year old girl) Mando (the 13 year old fostered boy) and Quinn (the adopted 4 year old son) not to mention a posse of dogs and cats. The story opens with the family driving to their new home in the small country town of Easley.Clementine (their neighbour) is full of rage and pain and is renowned locally for her hostile attitude. She suffered a violent loss 2 years earlier and is doing her best to not to let the grief break through. As the story opens, the new arrivals across the way, coincide with her husband giving up on her and walking out. She has a beautiful horse called Comet, that she can't bring herself to take care of properly. Comet has been shut in a too small paddock for the last 2 years and is desperate for space and movement.This book is about various journeys, both literal and symbolic. It is told in the alternate voices of Jackie and Clementine. Star and Comet kind of save each other... Star and Clementine kind of save each other too... Jackie and Paula explore some of the edges of their intimacy that they know well and yet are also new... Mando has his own personal rite of passage with the help of a local deputy, that is redemptive for all sorts of reasons... Quinn somehow holds the heart of the family in his small boy's chest...This is a lovely book. Read it, I say and let it touch you. I think Ms. Ryan Hyde writes contemporary parables... what I mean by that is, that her stories are about people we can see and feel ourselves in. Not because we have had the same direct experience (though we might have done in some cases) but because the narratives of the heart are so exquisitely human, and we can all can all recognise and resonate with that. She writes so well. I love her lyrical and spare style. I enjoy how much she can tell us about something without unpacking it. For example, the complexity and range of Jackie and Paula's partnership is so powerfully drawn, without a lot of obvious historic detail. A brilliant skill. And, yes, she writes about brokenness... and then rather than miraculously fixing what's broken, the winding trails of her stories take her people and animals to ways of living with, including, softening around and even celebrating the broken bits. As Leonard Cohen says, we are all broken, everything is broken... it's the way of things... and it's those cracks in everything that let the light stream in... There is a lot of light and tenderness in CRH's writing. And a lot of human messiness. Like life.
M**M
A touching story.
This is the second book I have read by this author and have really enjoyed them. Gentle story about a young girl and her love for a horse.
S**I
Fabulous
I bought this book as I thought it sounded interesting and I have never read any of Catherine Ryan Hyde' s novels before. It more than surpassed my expectations.It was a wonderful and emotional read, it covered many varying emotional stories between the characters and tied them all together supremely.I found myself feeling all the same emotions as the main characters.I will certainly be recommending this novel to many of my friends.
K**R
Another winner
Each book I read from this author is a little treasure. Beautifully written with a lesson for all of us.Read and enjoy.
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