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Pearl
Pearl | Siān Hughes
19 posts | 17 read | 15 to read
Marianne is eight years old when her mother goes missing. Left behind with her baby brother and grieving father in a ramshackle house on the edge of a small village, she clings to the fragmented memories of her mother' s love; the smell of fresh herbs, the games they played, and the songs and stories of her childhood. As time passes, Marianne struggles to adjust, fixated on her mother' s disappearance and the secrets she' s sure her father is keeping from her. Discovering a medieval poem called Pearl and trusting in its promise of consolation, Marianne sets out to make a visual illustration of it, a task that she returns to over and over but somehow never manages to complete. Tormented by an unmarked gravestone in an abandoned chapel and the tidal pull of the river, her childhood home begins to crumble as the past leads her down a path of self-destruction. But can art heal Marianne? And will her own future as a mother help her find peace?
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review
Kazzie
Pearl | Siān Hughes
Pickpick

Beautiful. There are very heavy topics: ED and self harm. But she deals with love and loss and grief of a mother very deftly.

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Graywacke
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Pickpick

My 11th from the #booker2023 longlist is surprisingly humble. This search for a lost mother, who stepped out and was never seen again, is a life‘s work. Hughes has been reworking this story since she was a teenager, and it‘s her 1st and only novel. It reads like a memoir, and it feels real. It‘s just that deeply thought through. It seems to do everything Hughes wanted it to do. Recommended.

53 likes1 stack add
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vlwelser
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Pickpick

This is very good. It's basically about mourning a parent. Or I guess mourning in general. The writing is lovely.

#BookSpinBingo @TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks Great progress!! 9mo
tpixie It sucks being an adult orphan 9mo
44 likes2 comments
blurb
Graywacke
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Getting started on this

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DebbieGrillo
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Pickpick

I liked this character driven story, until the ending. That's when I knew I loved this story. It's a reminder that we never really know what someone else is thinking and feeling, so we should always make the best possible assumptions of others.

Suet624 Great reminder. 10mo
61 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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DebbieGrillo
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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DebbieGrillo
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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When someone takes their life, they don‘t only steal the future out from under our feet, they also desecrate their past. It makes it hard to hold on to the good things about them. And no one deserves to be judged on the worst five minutes of their life, even if those five minutes turn out to be their last.

SiĆ¢n Hughes, Pearl

56 likes1 stack add
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keepingupwiththepenguins
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Pickpick

I must admit, I went in making some assumptions that were way off base. With that title ā€“ Pearl ā€“ and the blurb referencing a young girl and her mother, I assumed it was some kind of adaptation or allusion to The Scarlet Letter. If youā€˜re assuming the same, let me disabuse you of that right now and save you a bit of confusion! Full review: https://keepingupwiththepenguins.com/pearl-sian-hughes/

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rmaclean4
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Mehso-so

Why is this on the #Booker longlist. It's a fine book, but nothing I have not read before. Novel about the loss of a mother and the impact it has on her daughter. I had to push myself to finish this one. 2.5 šŸŒŸ

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BarbaraBB
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Mehso-so

#Booker23 08/13
Unfortunately I didn‘t enjoy this book as much as many of you did. What I did like was the setting of the ā€œold houseā€, where a young mother one day walks out, leaving behind her 8 year old daughter and her baby brother.
The book is about the daughter, dealing with the mother who never came back.
It could be so good, but to me it felt a bit as if the author wanted too much, with the poems and the sub-plots. Glad I read it though!

Cinfhen You look like you‘re out having a nice day ā˜ŗļø 1y
BarbaraBB @Cinfhen Haha, yes, a friend invited me to a so-called ā€œhigh wineā€ on a local vineyard, surrounded by vines! 1y
Cinfhen Looks lovely šŸ„‚ 1y
See All 7 Comments
sarahbarnes Hmm, this one does sound interesting. I‘m sorry to hear it fell a little short. And high wine sounds lovely! 1y
Megabooks Sounds like a really fun afternoon! 1y
Suet624 I lived very close to vineyards for a year. The land and surroundings always felt so abundant. 1y
BarbaraBB That‘s the right word indeed, abundant! 1y
75 likes7 comments
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BookishTrish
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Pickpick

I‘m not usually into non-linear audiobook narratives and I loathe ā€˜suicide as mystery‘ storylines. And yet I really liked this book. It‘s totally not a ā€˜me‘ book, but I really felt like it worked.

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ClairesReads
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Pickpick

Pearl is a story about a lost mother, all the different kinds of grief and the way they manifest over time, and across generations. The narration is non-linear and unreliable in a way that deliberately plays with the concept of the fallibility of memory without being gimmicky or too obscure. It was a story that made me feel so empathetic for all the flawed characters without feeling like trauma-porn. It‘s almost pitch perfect.

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Deblovestoread
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Pickpick

With Pearl I met my goal of 150 books for the year. Looking forward to some chunkster reading in the next 4 months.

As for Pearl it is a light pick for me. My 2nd Booker long list about a family devastated by the loss of the wife and mother. Marianne‘s journey through her grief at age 8 is long and difficult. I wanted to feel emotionally connected to the story but instead I felt more on the outside looking in. Definitely could be a me problem

Bookwomble Good going for your reading target! šŸŽÆšŸ˜ŠšŸ‘ 1y
BarbaraBB 150 books. That‘s amazing! Congrats. Looking forward to the book! 1y
51 likes2 comments
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quietlycuriouskate
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Pickpick

A lovely book. A sad and tender book.
Living through the unresolved disappearance of her mother when she was a child, Marianne seems forever betwixt and between the "old house" and the "new house", unable to fully inhabit either. Her roles of daughter, sister, lover, mother, artist and art therapist are likewise shaped by her grief and the effect it has had on her childhood memories, transforming them to part-remembered, part-imagined experiences.

quietlycuriouskate This had me blowing the dust off the Norton Anthology, so as to acquaint myself with the medieval poem of the title. šŸ™‚ 1y
TrishB Lovely review ā™„ļø 1y
squirrelbrain I really liked this one too. I think you‘ll like two other of the Booker nominees - All the Little Bird-Hearts and How to Build a Boat. 1y
quietlycuriouskate @squirrelbrain Thanks, Helen. I'll have to check if the library has them yet. They didn't last time I checked i.e. when the longlist was announced. 1y
squirrelbrain Mine had Boat but not Bird-Hearts, although it does now. They‘ve all now appeared on BorrowBox too. 1y
36 likes5 comments
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TheKidUpstairs
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Pickpick

An absolute gem of a book. Following a young girl into adulthood as she searches for who she is and what life is, following the disappearance of her mother.

Like another Booker Longlister, Western Lane, the empty space where a mother should be looms over this book. But where Gopi grasped at routine and rigidity, Marianne falls to brambles and wandering.

Cont'd...

TheKidUpstairs ...The rhythms of the story take on that of a river, here rushing and rising, there falling to a burbling trickle over rocks and roots. I enjoyed falling into its flow. Beautiful and affecting. I don't know if it'll make the short list, as it doesn't feel very "Booker-ish", but I asked it 1y
TheKidUpstairs That should say "adored" not asked ?ā€ā™€ļø 1y
squirrelbrain Great review! I really liked this one too, but preferred Bird-Hearts, and possibly Boat, but I haven‘t finished that one yet. 1y
67 likes1 stack add4 comments
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Tamra
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Mehso-so

Chronicles a woman‘s struggle to cope with the childhood trauma of her mother‘s disappearance.

Perhaps this novel is a more focused reading experience in print, but on audio I felt like it meandered without a clear trajectory. That might be intentional as the MC is stuck trying to make sense of the unanswered questions surrounding her mother‘s life and presumed death.

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squirrelbrain
Pearl | Siān Hughes
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Pickpick

#bookerlonglist Book 3/13

I really liked this and I‘m glad I got to discover it thanks to the Booker as I‘d not heard of it before. It felt very ā€˜English‘, with skipping rhymes at the start of each chapter, and the narrator had a Yorkshire lilt. (Even though the book is set in the Midlands)

It did however feel more like a Women‘s Prize nominee rather than a Booker book. That isn‘t to denigrate either the book or the Women‘s Prize but it‘s ā¬‡ļø

squirrelbrain ā€¦style was quite slow and meditative and it wasn‘t particularly ā€˜challenging‘ as Booker books can sometimes be. 1y
BookwormM Glad you enjoyed it 1y
TheKidUpstairs I've got this one queued up on my kobo and hope to get to it soon. Your review intrigues me. I get what you're saying about typically women's prize style books vs Booker books - they do tend to each have their own flavour of nominated books (neither being "Better", just different). Esi Edugyan has said that she doesn't think there should be a typically "Booker-style" book, and it certainly seems like that thinking is mirrored in the Longlist. 1y
BarbaraBB Interesting! I can‘t get hold of it until September so I hope it‘ll make the shortlist! 1y
73 likes3 stack adds4 comments