Reviews

The Tender Grave by Sheri Reynolds

kkayleen's review

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3.0

it was a good book, a fine book. mother hilda was by far the most complex but starred a smaller role - jen & eric i also liked but the most unlikable characters, teresa & dori had the biggest stages. i appreciated the story writing and most of the prose, but all of the action happened in this novel prior to our beginning - the biggest thing that happened was the cat dying. :-/ not a lot to pull from.

lauralovesherbooks's review

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4.0

The Tender Grave is a complex and beautiful novel about a teenage girl that must come to terms with her part in a horrible act of violence. Without mitigating the seriousness of her crime, we learn Dori is also a victim at the hands of those who should have protected her growing up. Throughout the novel, readers must grapple with the tension of empathizing with Dori's vulnerability without ever excusing her actions. It's difficult and uncomfortable, but that seems to be exactly Reynolds's point. "Most people want things clear-cut and simple: a good guy and a bad guy, a right way and a wrong." Here, we get a reality that is far more complicated and painful, but also healing.

elvang's review

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4.0

The Tender Grave opens in dramatic fashion. Seventeen year old Dori and her boyfriend are suspects in a hate crime committed against a gay classmate. Her mother gives her enough money to leave town and hands her the address of a half-sister she has never met. Right away Dori’s plight makes you question your own emotional responses. Do you have empathy for a girl running away from this terrible act as she is all alone and ill equipped to survive on her own or are you disgusted by the decision both she and her mother have made to avoid prosecution? Living by her wits and some theft Dori finds her way to her sister Teresa’s town when she is picked up by the local police for vagrancy.

Teresa and Jen are renovating an old motel and trying to get pregnant. When the police show up at Teresa’s door she is as shocked to meet Dori as Dori is shocked to find out her sister is married to another woman.

This is a powerful and thought provoking read. Both sisters have shared the same unstable mother and both have been damaged emotionally. Teresa’s constant yearning to have a child and her ongoing frustration at being unable to conceive masks underlying abandonment issues. Dori’s life with her erratic parents has left her with no moral compass and an inability to trust in others. Both are survivors and both are searching for the stability they have missed in their childhood.

Impressive and captivating literary fiction I won’t soon forget.

A copy of this book was given to LezReviewBooks by the publisher for review.
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