13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of My Favorites!, 16 May 2007
By Emily Zielke - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Feeling for Bones (Paperback)
I was a little skeptical of reading Feeling for Bones because I know so many other "eating disorder" novels that include a girl with a body image problem. But the main focus of the story is not the anorexia of a teenage girl. There are so many relatable elements to the story: family dynamics, teenage relationships, and spiritual realization. The spiritual undertone increases as the characters and plot develop. Pierce completes the story with a beatiful illustration of God's care and healing power. I recommend this story to women who are craving to know more about Jesus Christ and realize him through everday situations. Men would also benefit from the story in their understanding of the thought processes of women during difficult situations in life.
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
You won't be disappointed., 6 Jun 2007
By FaithfulReader.com - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Feeling for Bones (Paperback)
One of Christian fiction's newest and best first novels, FEELING FOR BONES, is just out -- and you don't want to miss it. In this beautifully written debut novel, newcomer Bethany Pierce crafts a memoir-like look at a young minister's daughter who battles anorexia and struggles to discover her inner beauty. Pierce is an unusually gifted writer whose book comes across as excellent literature rather than preaching, a problem with so many message-driven Christian novels.
After a distressing church vote, 16-year-old Olivia's father has lost his job as pastor. She, her younger sister, the oddly named Callapher, and their parents leave Ohio for the Appalachian Mountains where they rent a house owned by their Great-Aunt Margaret and her friend, Ruby, who they call "the Old Maids." Olivia immediately nicknames the two-bedroom, one-bathroom decrepit house "the Shoe Box." "Think we can suffer for Jesus here, don't you?" says her father, ironically.
Olivia's sense of helplessness and emptiness in the face of upheaval comes through Pierce's memorable scenes and some rich passages in the book. "I thought of my father. When I saw him in my mind, he was always just looking up from a book, an expression of bewilderment in his eyes...." Her dad quits going to church and sleeps in on Sunday mornings, while Olivia's mother tiptoes around, trying not to disturb him. "Looking into the shadows of the bedroom, I felt I had physically come face-to-face with the very substance of my own despair," muses Olivia. She is afraid. Controlling her eating is a way --- the way --- Olivia has of controlling her fear.
As Olivia struggles to discover her place in the world apart from her appearance, she finds help in unusual places. "The summer job saved me," she says of her part-time work at a car lot office. Her best friends Mollie and Matthew involve her in creative pursuits and help her focus on things other than food --- or not thinking about food. "I ate without tasting, even, crowding my belly...and still feeling, in a different place, a deep and hollow emptiness."
Pierce is an English professor at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, as well as an artist. These two talents are evident as the novel unfolds in beautiful, descriptive prose. The opening lines are particularly evocative:
"At the age of sixteen, I suffered recurring nightmares. I was running as hard as I could while my destination on the horizon receded to a pinpoint and vanished like the white pop of an old television screen winking out. I lay in a trance at the bottom of a pool, suffocating beneath an invisible, silent weight; people's voices reached my ears across a great distance, and the reflection of my body was always before me, wavering in myriad and grotesque distortions."
Following Olivia into her interior world is an education in how some women view their bodies. Glued to Olivia's bedroom wall is a collage of beautiful women --- women in stilettos, women in lingerie, women with thick lips, billowing hair and flat bellies --- who Olivia sees as typifying beauty. She recalls her earliest memories of her father reading fairy tales to her, stories of pretty princesses. She remembers her mother buying her bridal magazines as a treat, full of lovely models "getting the prince." Is it any wonder, we realize, that girls grow up with distorted ideas of what true beauty is?
As Olivia paints and is introduced to poetry, her interior life slowly begins to take on importance over her exterior appearance. The end is redemptive without being in any way saccharine.
If you enjoy beautiful writing and rich, dark, intriguing inspirational fiction, then you'll love FEELING FOR BONES. If you only read one new novelist in Christian fiction this year, start here. You won't be disappointed.
--- Reviewed by Cindy Crosby
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
I wouldn't suggest that anyone read this..., 20 Aug 2010
By Holly Gollnick - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Feeling For Bones (Kindle Edition)
If you're into the subject of this book, then you might think it is worth it, but of all the books I've read over the last couple of years, this one was the least gripping for sure.
I think the cover and the pages next to each chapter are an awesome touch, and I like how she describes her cute little sister and all of the funny things she says... these are reasons why I could say I liked this book enough to have kept reading it.
But this book doesn't go into anything in any depth. She doesn't go into her eating disorder much, doesn't go into the relationship she has with the boy... it all gets glossed over, and at the end, you don't feel like you know what the book was even about?
I thought the part where she lays in the snow and has a realization might have had some meaning, but it really wasn't enough to make you satisfied after reading the whole book.