From Publishers Weekly Shors's third novel tells an absorbing story weakened by melodrama, sentimentality and exposition. After promising her dying father, a Vietnam War veteran, to take care of his shelter for street children in Ho Chi Minh City, American writer Iris agrees to take along her childhood friend Noah, now a depressed veteran who lost his leg in Iraq. In Vietnam, they find the shelter has drawn an appealing cast of Americans and Vietnamese, all seeking escape and salvation, including two children exploited by a brutal drug addict, and an impoverished old woman whose granddaughter is dying of cancer. Though interesting, most characters never overcome Shors's insistence on telling, rather than showing, their inner lives ("he hurt and hated so much"). Melodrama and mawkish foreshadowing ("I'm taking the risks... and everything's going to be just the way it was meant to be") will prove familiar to anyone who's watched a TV movie. Though frustrating, this is the kind of novel (provocative, polarizing, exotic) that should stir book group discussion. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Read more Review "In a large cast of appealing characters, the street children are the heart of this book; their talents, friendships, and perils keep you turning the pages." -Karen Joy Fowler, "New York Times" bestselling author of "The Jane Austen Book Club" "I loved this book and cared deeply about the characters brought to life by Shors' clear sensitivity to the plight of the unseen and unwanted in Vietnam." -Elizabeth Flock, "New York Times" bestselling author of "Me & Emma" "Amid the wreckage of what's known in Vietnam as the "American War," Shors has set his sprawling, vibrant novel. All of his characters--hustlers, humanitarians, street children--carry wounds, visible or otherwise. And in the cacophony of their voices, he asks that most essential question: "How can we be better?" -David Oliver Relin, bestselling author of "Three Cups of Tea" "There is a tenderness in this moving, deeply descriptive novel that brings all those frequently hidden qualities ofi?In a large cast of appealing characters, the street children are the heart of this book; their talents, friendships, and perils keep you turning the pages.? ?Karen Joy Fowler, "New York Times" bestselling author of "The Jane Austen Book Club" ?I loved this book and cared deeply about the characters brought to life by Shors? clear sensitivity to the plight of the unseen and unwanted in Vietnam.? ?Elizabeth Flock, "New York Times" bestselling author of "Me & Emma" Read more P.when('A').execute(function(A) { A.on('a:expander:toggle_description:toggle:collapse', function(data) { window.scroll(0, data.expander.$expander[0].offsetTop-100); }); }); About the Author John Shors traveled extensively throughout Asia after graduating from Colorado College in 1991, living for several years in Japan, where he taught English, and then trekking across the continent, visiting ten countries and climbing the Himalayas. More recently, Mr. Shors worked as a newspaper reporter in his hometown, Des Moines, Iowa, before entering public relations and moving to Boulder, Colorado. Beneath a Marble Sky is his first novel. Read more See more
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