Ashley's Reviews > The Glittering Hour
The Glittering Hour
by
by
I was excited for The Glittering Hour because it was a historical fiction novel not set in the WWII era. As much as I love that time period (honestly, it's my favorite), it has become overdone in novels recently. We need variety as readers and this book seemed to give us that reprieve.
The Glittering Hour is set in dual time periods, in 1925 with The Bright Young People, a frivolous set of British society's youth and 11 years later in 1936 with a young girl stuck in her grandparents' home while her mother and father are away on business. In between these chapters are often letters from mother to young daughter, as the mother describes the details of her trip and sets up a treasure hunt around the grounds of the girl's grandparents' gigantic estate. I loved the concept of the treasure hunt, as it revealed details about the mother's past to her young daughter. This plot point made me very interested in the story from the beginning. Unfortunately, the story never really piqued my interest from that point forward. I had to take a break around 30% because it was no longer holding my interest. The promise of the great reviews on Goodreads mentioning what was ahead kept me hanging on.
My main issue with this book is the terribly slow writing. The bottom line is that it's infinitely too wordy for my taste. I would find my mind wandering in each paragraph and eventually had to begin skimming to get through the story. I wasn't interested in the adventures of The Bright Young People because their exploits were shallow and vain. The only people in the story who sparked feeling from me were Lawrence and Alice, and their parts in the story were far too short, and still somehow still drawn out and too descriptive.
The plot of the story as a whole was incredibly beautiful and heartbreaking. It seemed like exactly the type of book I would love and honestly would have loved if not for the writing style used. I needed a quicker plot and fewer words to make this feel less like a tome I was slogging through for a grade in school. I desperately wish I could have connected to the story, the bones of an epic plot were there, but unfortunately, it wasn't for me.
Please don't just take my word for it. This is likely to be a popular read, being a Book of the Month selection for December. It already has numerous five-star recommendations from excellent reviewers and will surely hit the right notes for many readers.
The Glittering Hour is set in dual time periods, in 1925 with The Bright Young People, a frivolous set of British society's youth and 11 years later in 1936 with a young girl stuck in her grandparents' home while her mother and father are away on business. In between these chapters are often letters from mother to young daughter, as the mother describes the details of her trip and sets up a treasure hunt around the grounds of the girl's grandparents' gigantic estate. I loved the concept of the treasure hunt, as it revealed details about the mother's past to her young daughter. This plot point made me very interested in the story from the beginning. Unfortunately, the story never really piqued my interest from that point forward. I had to take a break around 30% because it was no longer holding my interest. The promise of the great reviews on Goodreads mentioning what was ahead kept me hanging on.
My main issue with this book is the terribly slow writing. The bottom line is that it's infinitely too wordy for my taste. I would find my mind wandering in each paragraph and eventually had to begin skimming to get through the story. I wasn't interested in the adventures of The Bright Young People because their exploits were shallow and vain. The only people in the story who sparked feeling from me were Lawrence and Alice, and their parts in the story were far too short, and still somehow still drawn out and too descriptive.
The plot of the story as a whole was incredibly beautiful and heartbreaking. It seemed like exactly the type of book I would love and honestly would have loved if not for the writing style used. I needed a quicker plot and fewer words to make this feel less like a tome I was slogging through for a grade in school. I desperately wish I could have connected to the story, the bones of an epic plot were there, but unfortunately, it wasn't for me.
Please don't just take my word for it. This is likely to be a popular read, being a Book of the Month selection for December. It already has numerous five-star recommendations from excellent reviewers and will surely hit the right notes for many readers.
Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read
The Glittering Hour.
Sign In »
Reading Progress
Comments Showing 1-8 of 8 (8 new)
date
newest »
message 1:
by
Melissa
(new)
-
added it
Dec 06, 2019 02:03PM
Awesome review!
reply
|
flag
I feel the same really. I liked the characters. I liked the overall story. But I still found myself wanting to quit reading it and I couldn't put my finger on why. I think you've cracked it.
This is such an odd book. I don’t dislike it at all but I’m struggling to not DNF at 44%. I’m finding myself getting wound up on Alice’s behalf, which is a sign of good writing, but I’m also finding it a chore to pick up and read, which isn’t a good sign. Never felt this way about a book before.
I agree 100% with Ashley’s entire review.
I found it slow, too wordy/descriptive where my mind also wandered, and I also could not connect to the “The Bright Young People” because as Ashley said, they were vain, shallow, and in my opinion, unlikeable.
I think this book would do better as a movie for me, as it was taking too long for me to read and I ultimately gave up at 11% after a few weeks of trying to get invested in the book. I just found myself avoiding even reopening or getting bored after a few pages.
I hate to give up, but I can’t force myself to stay...
I found it slow, too wordy/descriptive where my mind also wandered, and I also could not connect to the “The Bright Young People” because as Ashley said, they were vain, shallow, and in my opinion, unlikeable.
I think this book would do better as a movie for me, as it was taking too long for me to read and I ultimately gave up at 11% after a few weeks of trying to get invested in the book. I just found myself avoiding even reopening or getting bored after a few pages.
I hate to give up, but I can’t force myself to stay...
Katie wrote: "I agree 100% with Ashley’s entire review.
I found it slow, too wordy/descriptive where my mind also wandered, and I also could not connect to the “The Bright Young People” because as Ashley said,..."
Thank you! I agree, I think this could be a great movie. The book was too much of a struggle.
I found it slow, too wordy/descriptive where my mind also wandered, and I also could not connect to the “The Bright Young People” because as Ashley said,..."
Thank you! I agree, I think this could be a great movie. The book was too much of a struggle.