Tuesday, June 6, 2017

Guest Review of The Essex Serpent by Sarah Perry

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My guest reviewer is my son, Mark, who did a marvelous job reviewing a book I didn't have time to read nor one that would have held my interest.

He read the book on his way back from a trip to Europe.  The photo is while he was on the plane and in his pajamas.  :)  He was flying first class in Lufthansa...excellent airline to fly.

Please follow Mark on Instagram for more exciting European adventures.  His Instagram name is:  markbuttons.



Thank you, Mark.  I hope you, my readers, enjoy his take on THE ESSEX SERPENT, and if you have read the book, let us know what you think.
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When I was first invited to do a guest review for this book, I was so excited because I love historical European fiction, especially in Britain.  And then I found out a little bit more like a vicious sea serpent, a gruesome murder, a grieving widow all the makings of a title worthy of top ranking on my bookshelf.  

My initial excitement could not have been more wrong, but in a different way than I initially expected, and overall I was surprised and mildly charmed by THE ESSEX SERPENT by Sarah Perry.

The book begins with a death in prominent Victorian English high-society and continues on with a widow who should be grieving, but seemingly felt bound by the chains of marriage and therefore seemed somewhat relieved by her husband’s untimely death.  

The story begins when the widow, Cora, relocates from London to Essex to raise her now fatherless son.  Cora integrates herself into Essex society as if she were one of the locals, especially with the local Vicar, William Ransome.  The base of the story and the main characters all seem to circle around this relationship and focus on the events of their comings and goings.

Admittedly, I was expecting a book about Cora and her love interest, the local Vicar, chasing a serpent through the English countryside to discover the identity of the beast who was on a murdering rampage through Essex.  Instead, this is a book about human life, love, religion, medicine, surgery and the human heart.  

Depending on your take on this, this is both a good and a bad twist.  This is a good twist because at the end of the story, I understood the point of view of the author when writing to create a world where the “serpent” had paralyzed the town with fear; however, I really was expecting a genuine mystery instead of a story about human life and tendencies.

As the story weaves through 11 months of the year, I can’t say that I am disheartened with the way the author chose to spin the story; however, ultimately I ended up disappointed.  The lack of expected thrill and mystery of chasing the serpent left me wishing I had stopped reading when the chapter turned from January to February.  
However, when I finally got to the crux of the story approximately 395 pages into the book, I smiled.  The story is a heartwarming tale of the way fear of the unknown changes people and brings unexpected relationships to fruition.

Overall the story kept my attention, but it had a lot of secondary characters who I still cannot grasp their relevance to the main plot. Throughout the story I had trouble keeping up with who was who and their relevance. 

The story jumped frequently between different characters, settings, and seemingly unrelated themes which left me going back to a previous chapters to recollect their significance.   

At the end of the day, the title of the book enraptured me into thinking it would be a heroic tale of chasing and slaying a serpent, but ended up a love story and one of human character and its frailties.  3/5.

This book was given to me free of charge and without compensation by the publisher in return for an honest review.

13 comments:

  1. Thank you, Mark, for your wonderful, honest review.

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  2. Fabulous review but I don't think the book is for me.

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    1. Thanks, Kathy.

      That is why I had him review it. I KNEW he would like it. :)

      Not for me either.

      Thanks for stopping.

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  3. Thank you for the review. Very nicely done.

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    1. Yes...my son did a great job.

      Thanks for stopping, Mystica.

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  4. I read this and enjoyed it a bit more than Mark, probably because I was more interested in the human interactions than the chasing of a serpent. I mostly had to read it because of one of the most stunning covers I've ever seen!

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    1. It is a beautiful cover.

      I am glad you enjoyed the book, OnDBookshelf. Wonder if it a male and female take on the book? :)

      Thanks for stopping.

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  5. I loved the review, Mark. Probably not a book I'll read but I can think of a few people I'll recommend it to.

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    1. Thanks, Mary. He did a very good job.

      Thanks for stopping.

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  6. Excellent review, Mark. I may read this book sometime.

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    1. I agree he did a very excellent job.

      Thanks for stopping, TracyK.

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  7. My reading group tonight chose this, on my recommendation, for our July read. I too was lured and enchanted by the cover. I think it will be a good selection for this group. It is up for a prize for historical fiction.

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    1. I hope your group enjoys the book and the discussion.

      The cover is gorgeous.

      Thanks for stopping, Judy.

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