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4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
Review: An Accidental Life Jan 27, 2008
By Craig Robinson
"praguelodyte"
As a male I don't normally read books with this theme (family drama and issues with single mothers and their children in crisis). Nevertheless, I found the book to be full of rich characters and striking visual imagery. Realistic dramatic portrayals and a keen eye for observation (no doubt due to the author's extensive career experience working with families in crisis) make this book an excellent read and well worth your time.
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Riveting family drama! Tugs at your heart-strings! Oct 21, 2008
By Betty L. Dravis
"BETTY DRAVIS, author/reviewer"
This intriguing novel is, basically, a family drama about the trouble four teenage girls from the Central Valley of California cause when they make some poor decisions. As with most teens, the trouble comes in the form of boys, sex, drugs, and/or alcohol. "After all," they reason, school's almost over and they want to have "the best summer ever."
But this powerful story is much more than that. It's also about the struggles their mothers face as they attempt to help their daughters; a story of strong, single mothers from diverse backgrounds and education bonding together in times of need.
"An Accidental Life" opens with Karin Larson, the main character, asking herself some hard questions about life; lately she's become a little disenchanted with her heavy responsibilities and elusive social life. Her career as a social worker--helping families in crisis--as rewarding as it is, often drains Karin, but she manages the fine balance of raising her teen-age daughter Bridget alone. They have a close mother-daughter relationship.
At the time Karin is thinking of "dating" again, Bridget is expanding her circle of friends, seeking a little more independence. Little does Karin know her life is about to get more complicated as author Laurel-Rain Snow seamlessly blends the teens' trauma with Karin's coworkers' problems and some exciting adventures with her "cases" at work.
What happens to Bridget's new friend Savannah is the first disaster in a string of disasters that escalate to form this multi-faceted story. Why can't Savannah's mother help her? And what happen to the other girls, Bree, Wendy, and Bridget? Are any of the teen boys "stand-up" kind of guys? Can they help? Do they help? Will Karin and the others, including several of the boys' parents, be able to help them get their lives back on track and go on to brighter futures?
I particularly enjoy one of the boy's mothers, Melody, but this book is sprinkled with so many warm, troubled, colorful characters that I empathized with them all. They enliven the pages, keeping the reader eagerly anticipating the next exciting event.
In addition to the teens' problems, there are several adult romances, and I admire the author's restraint in keeping the love scenes discreet. Admirably done, Laurel-Rain Snow!
And in another surprising twist, there's a serial-killer on the loose, stalking Molly, one of Karin's young, lovely co-workers. This is a truly exciting part of this novel: I couldn't wait to learn his identity and motivation. What a creep!
All in all, I love this book. Laurel-Rain Snow is a gifted writer who understands the human psyche with all its foibles. To be completely honest, I have one minor complaint, which may not bother others. The slight flaw, IMHO, is that some of the descriptions of decor and clothing are too long and happen too often, interfering with the flow of the story. As a result I didn't get into the characters for about the first fifty pages. Am I ever glad I didn't quit because when this author hooked me, her riveting words and realistic characters held me tight ... until I floated back to reality at the satisfying ending of this powerful drama.
I enthusiastically recommend this heart-warming tale of real people with real problems ... people just like you and me ... or someone we know.
Reviewed by: Betty Dravis, October, 2008 author of 1106 Grand Boulevard
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
An Accidental Life Sep 30, 2009
By N. Wadel
"http://thebookinn.blogspot.com/"
The story tells of four teenage girls, each coming from a difficult home life.
Bridget, living with her mom Karin, who is divorced and is a social worker. Bridget's a quiet girl, with one friend, Fawn who is out of town visiting with her father for the summer. Feeling lonely, decides to go to the mall, something her and Fawn used to do together. At the mall she is confronted by two girls from school, Wendy and Bree. Wendy, who lives with her mom Donna and two younger brothers. Donna's had a tough life trying to support 3 children by herself, working nights in a bar while Wendy takes care of her brothers. Bree also living with her mom Sara. Sara's had some ups and downs involving loser men, drugs and alcohol. After shopping in the mall, Bree and Wendy talk Bridget into going with them to hang out. Bridget's shy and feeling sort of nervous, decides she wants to have some fun this summer so leaving a note with her mom, heads out to the lake with Bree and Wendy. Everyone is having fun, smoking, drinking, Bridget still feeling overwhelmed. Savannah, another girl from school, meets them, hands Bridget a joint. Bridget's never done this before and after inhaling it, starts coughing. Everyone laughs but feeling the effects, she starts laughing to. Savannah who also comes from a broken family. A brother Tommy, her mom, Mary, a druggy and alcoholic,her dad, in prison for drug possession. These four girls continue to hang out, calling themselves the Four Musketeers but along the way, making poor choices, and their lives drastically change.
The story also introduces the girls social workers and how their lives are affected by their job and how they live. With some surprising twists and turns!
The author , who is a retired social worker, adds her expertise in the field which leaves you wondering, what is truth and what is fiction?
Enjoyed reading this story and I highly recommend it.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
How you cope with the hand you are dealt Sep 24, 2009
By Linda Bulger Troubled families are the everyday fare of social worker Karin Larson. She works in a child welfare agency in Fresno, California, and sees all too clearly the troubles that girls can get themselves into--girls just like her fifteen-year-old daughter Bridget, whom Karin is raising alone after the long-ago breakup of her marriage. It's the start of another hot summer, and Bridget meets some new friends and makes some bad choices.
Bridget, with her supportive mother, gets back on track but her new friends Bree and Savannah are not so lucky. With their own families in free-fall, they entangle themselves with drugs and partying; they come under the care of Karin's agency with compromised prospects for the future.
Karin and her colleagues Joyce and Molly have their own private issues. Longing for connections to balance the sadness and stress of their work, can they let friendship and even romance into their lives? They make their own choices, some good, some bad -- and they face some challenges not of their own making.
In her first published novel, Author Laurel-Rain Snow twines together the stories of these women and their families. Her writing reflects their different perspectives and as we see them learn from their mistakes -- or in some cases repeat their mistakes -- their own realities are pitch-perfect. An Accidental Life takes the reader through two years of joys, heartaches, and growth. Snow avoids the beginner's trap of wrapping everything up too neatly at the end, and the reader is left with a very satisfying sense that these well-crafted characters are (like any other "real" people) still in a state of possibilities.
I particularly enjoyed some of the secondary characters, their stories barely breaking the surface of the novel but giving it depth. Something tells me that this author hasn't told us all she knows, and I'm looking forward to reading the other books she has in print (and more in the future, I hope). A retired social worker herself, Snow uses her writer's gift to showcase real life and, more importantly, the crucial connections that give it structure and joy. I recommend An Accidental Life as a fine family drama with contemporary flair. Five stars.
Linda Bulger, 2009
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