Divine Secrets of the YaYa Sisterhood A Novel The YaYa Series Rebecca Wells 9780060759957 Books
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Divine Secrets of the YaYa Sisterhood A Novel The YaYa Series Rebecca Wells 9780060759957 Books
What an incredible journey! Let me start off by saying this is not a genre I read typically. I am more of an intrigue, romance, fantasy gal.Well, not anymore.
Wow! Just WOW!
This is a book about womanhood but at large about humanity. Every single character is so realistically flawed and yet understandable. I love books that teach me something or make me understand something I thought inconceivable. This book told me of friendship, of addiction, child abuse, racism, Louisiana, discrimination, the 50s. It made me laugh and it made me cry, often at the same time. I found myself moved page after page.
Oh, the FEELS!!! I missed a flight while reading this book, completely engrossed in its pages, reading at my gate. It was worth it ;P
If you follow my reviews, you know how critical I am. Well, the writing was flawless. The author goes seamlessly back and forth in time using different points of views. I was not confused once.
Reading this book I transformed into a child, a mother, a friend. I cried death and celebrated love. I smelled the flowers and foods of Louisiana, I swam in the bayou, I learned some Cajun.
The description of how people of color were treated is appalling but historically accurate (as far as I can tell). It made me uneasy, as I think it was supposed to. "White people" at the time were mentally used to discrimination and did not perceive it as wrong, though it made my skin crawl. I did not feel that the author was racist like some reviewers expressed (and I am a fanatic supporter of minorities!). It is good we do not forget how bad things could get. Also, I did not feel like other reviewers that the story was cheesy. Topics like abuse and addiction were treated non-judgmentally and the idea of women having children was treated in a very nonstereotypical way, which I appreciated.
Oh, please, just read it already.
Tags : Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood: A Novel (The Ya-Ya Series) [Rebecca Wells] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. <strong>“A very entertaining and, ultimately, deeply moving novel about the complex bonds between mother and daughter.” —<em>Washington Post</em></strong> <strong>“Mary McCarthy,Rebecca Wells,Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood: A Novel (The Ya-Ya Series),Harper Perennial,006075995X,FIC008000,Sagas,Conflict of generations,Domestic fiction,Female friendship,Louisiana,Mothers and daughters,Washington (State),Women,AMERICAN CONTEMPORARY FICTION,American Contemporary Fiction - Individual Authors +,FICTION Family Life General,FICTION General,FICTION Sagas,FICTION Women,Fiction,Fiction - General,GENERAL,General Adult,Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
Divine Secrets of the YaYa Sisterhood A Novel The YaYa Series Rebecca Wells 9780060759957 Books Reviews
Ms Wells writes a mother/daughter conflict saga that has southern done right!!! The word is ya'll not you all. There are these kind of examples all through the book.
The story is so engaging and a real page turner, but you will not finish this book overnight or even 2 nights. This is a great story that has many levels. The Ya Yas are so engaging and personable your heart laughs and giggles, then breaks in a thousand pieces.
Please read this book to make you see that generation with new insight. Southern are not stupid or are all red-necks. I say this is a southern women from Tyler, Texas.
Excellent movie!
What can I say...It's been in my top ten movie list for years and years.
I have it on VHS and DVD but I decided to upgrade and have it at my fingertips in my feed.
I love this ultimate chick movie. It deals with dark secrets, a tainted mother-daughter relationship dynamic, the value of friendship, true love, tragedies in life.....seriously, this movie is one that I have watched at least 15 times. I love it for so many reasons and will continue to watch it.
It's such a great reminder of the beauty of life and how to press on.
Great movie!
A wonderful book. It would have been worth five stars if it didn't have a couple of spots at the beginning that made it hard for me to care about a particular character. It wasn't a lack of sympathy so much as a sense that there wasn't a rationality developed for her behavior yet, and so I felt that she was someone I couldn't trust to grow in a satisfying way. I won't get into specifics, because spoilers (although at this point I'm sure most people who want to read it have already done so) but she got better, and the narrative involving the other characters was so fascinating that I just bore through the parts that included her.
i saw the movie years ago when it came out and finally got around to reading the book. while parts were changed for a more dramatic and entertaining hollywood flow, overall, the mother-daughter feelings and complicated relationship were as raw and exposed as ever. it's a good book for all women - mothers and daughters - to read and bond. a great reminder all mothers started from girlhood to womanhood with their own unique experiences, including hardships and happiness.
I don't know why I waited so long to read this book. It is delightful. It tells the story of a group of Louisiana friends from their childhoods, through WWII, on to adulthood, and grandmotherhood. These very southern ladies are the ya-yas. A name they gave their group as children. Their children are called the petite ya-yas. And their husbands, yep, the ya-ya husbands. I strongly suspect there is some truth in this story. The narrator, no, facilitator, of the story is the daughter of one of the ya-yas. She had a special childhood, and she knows it, but events in the past, inflicted on her by her ya-ya mother, have left her uncertain of how to love, or if she is worthy. She resolves her problems, and comes to a mature love and understanding of her mother, by reading her mother's scrapbook, entitled the Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood. The book will make you yearn for your own childhood under the swaying fronds of Spanish moss. It is as much about the narrator as it is about the Ya-Yas. One thing that comes through loud and clear is the power of friendship and love. The ya-yas pull each other through the worst of times, and celebrate the best of times together. Girl power to the 25th degree.
Recovering from right foot surgery has given me the uninterrupted time to sip, savor, and belabor the Divine Sisters, their secrets and their healing dysfunction. Wells has created a visual, sensual and almost mystical landscape of mother daughter relationships, set in the heat, humidity, and heart of Louisiana with a Southern drawl. I loved the movie, grew up myself in the 50s and 60s with parents who were the ages of Shep and Vivi, and understand the turmoil of being an adult child of an alcoholic and being uncomfortable in one's own skin. And after all my name is Vivian, named after my maternal grandmother. Ya Ya!!!!!
What an incredible journey! Let me start off by saying this is not a genre I read typically. I am more of an intrigue, romance, fantasy gal.
Well, not anymore.
Wow! Just WOW!
This is a book about womanhood but at large about humanity. Every single character is so realistically flawed and yet understandable. I love books that teach me something or make me understand something I thought inconceivable. This book told me of friendship, of addiction, child abuse, racism, Louisiana, discrimination, the 50s. It made me laugh and it made me cry, often at the same time. I found myself moved page after page.
Oh, the FEELS!!! I missed a flight while reading this book, completely engrossed in its pages, reading at my gate. It was worth it ;P
If you follow my reviews, you know how critical I am. Well, the writing was flawless. The author goes seamlessly back and forth in time using different points of views. I was not confused once.
Reading this book I transformed into a child, a mother, a friend. I cried death and celebrated love. I smelled the flowers and foods of Louisiana, I swam in the bayou, I learned some Cajun.
The description of how people of color were treated is appalling but historically accurate (as far as I can tell). It made me uneasy, as I think it was supposed to. "White people" at the time were mentally used to discrimination and did not perceive it as wrong, though it made my skin crawl. I did not feel that the author was racist like some reviewers expressed (and I am a fanatic supporter of minorities!). It is good we do not forget how bad things could get. Also, I did not feel like other reviewers that the story was cheesy. Topics like abuse and addiction were treated non-judgmentally and the idea of women having children was treated in a very nonstereotypical way, which I appreciated.
Oh, please, just read it already.
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