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Marti Leimbach

Author of Daniel Isn't Talking

20+ Works 810 Members 63 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Marti Leimbach

Works by Marti Leimbach

Daniel Isn't Talking (2006) 369 copies, 24 reviews
Dying Young (1990) 141 copies, 2 reviews
The Man From Saigon (2010) 123 copies, 29 reviews
Dragonfly Girl (2021) 57 copies, 2 reviews
Love and Houses (1997) 48 copies, 1 review
Age of Consent (2016) 40 copies, 5 reviews
Falling Backwards (2001) 8 copies
Sun dial street (1992) 5 copies
California Blues (1993) 4 copies
Perché non parli (2006) 4 copies
Kjærlighetens valg (1991) 2 copies

Associated Works

Ox-Tales: Earth (2009) — Contributor — 86 copies, 3 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1963
Gender
female
Nationality
USA

Members

Reviews

This was a great start to a book series about Kira Adams, a young and brilliant, self-taught scientist. I am very much looking forward to reading Academy One when it is published as I am intrigued to find out how it will be written as both the sequel and a standalone novel. I love that the book starts with Kira's accomplishment winning a prestigious science award followed by her return to real life and the debts awaiting her and her mother. It was realistic that winning an award didn't take away all of the problems you were facing before the good news.… (more)
 
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Shauna_Morrison | 1 other review | Dec 20, 2022 |
A good read. Hard because the author gets how Bobbi feels and acts so well. And Craig is such a nasty narcissist that I wanted to throttle to death. But he is an accurate depiction of an abuser especially psychologically. He gaslights Bobbi and June, actually anyone he thinks is inferior to him which is everyone in his narcissistic opinion.
 
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pacbox | 4 other reviews | Jul 9, 2022 |
 
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archivomorero | 1 other review | Jun 27, 2022 |
About 30 (!) years ago, my mum and I went to the cinema to see Dying Young, a film starring Julia Roberts, still a major star riding high on the success of Pretty Woman: and Campbell Scott, a beautiful young man on whom I developed an instant huge crush which endures to this day. Roberts played Hilary, a streetwise, tough-but-vulnerable city girl from the ‘wrong side of the tracks’, who takes a job as a nurse for Victor, a well-educated young man from a wealthy family, who has terminal leukaemia. Ordinarily their paths would never cross, but they inevitably fall in love and discover that they have plenty to teach each other. Yes, it’s Pretty Woman with the prostitution removed and a timebomb of an illness added. I rewatched the film a few years ago, and despite its obvious flaws, I still enjoyed it.

Anyway…this book by Marti Leimbach is the story which the film was based on, and this was my first time reading it. For anyone else who has seen the film, be aware that I am playing fast and loose with the words “based on.” The story was transplanted from rural Massachusetts in the book to San Francisco, and in the book Hilary is a persistent shoplifter, while Victor is cruel and unkind most of the time – in the film there is no sign of either of these traits.

In the book, which is told entirely from Hilary’s point of view, Hilary and Victor have already moved away to Hull, a small town where everyone knows each other, to get away from Victor’s father, who wants Victor to continue his treatment for leukaemia. Victor meanwhile has decided to give up all treatment and just enjoy what time he has left. He and Hilary fight a lot, and she has an affair with a local man named Gordon. As if this isn’t complicated enough, Gordon and Victor become friends. Hilary is torn between her love for these two very different men as well as being wracked with guilt, and all three of them have some big decisions to make about their respective futures.

Honestly I am not sure what to think about this book. It’s certainly an interesting situation, and it was an easy undemanding read, despite the subject matter. However, the main problem is that I didn’t feel that any of the characters were particularly well fleshed out so it was hard to get a read on them. I did feel more for Victor; he could be unkind, but it seemed fairly clear that it was an angry reaction to the hand that life had dealt him, although he lashed out (verbally) at Hilary – she being his only available target – which was unfair.

The story was fairly slow moving, which was fine, and almost felt like a series of vignettes strung together, rather than a continuous narrative. I don’t mind this style of writing, but it might not appeal to some readers.

I won’t give away the ending, suffice to say that I found it downbeat and somewhat unlikely. Overall I have mixed feelings and I’m unsure whether or not I would read anything else by this author. However, I applaud her for not taking the easy route with this situation and for writing characters, who ordinarily readers would want to side with, but who in this case are not always easy to like.
… (more)
 
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Ruth72 | 1 other review | May 1, 2022 |

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Works
20
Also by
1
Members
810
Popularity
#31,510
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
63
ISBNs
90
Languages
10

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