I mentioned in a previous blog post that I have an amazing book store in my home town of Monument, Colorado, Covered Treasures.
In this amazing book store is an entire shelf dedicated to Advanced
Reader Copies, ARCs. For a small donation to their charity, you can take
home one of their many ARCs to read. Sitting on this shelf was The Space Between Words by Michèle Phoenix, a book that was released September 5, 2017.
I was so pleased I picked up this book. Based on the description, I
wasn't sure if this was going to read like an emotionally heavy Jodi Picoult
book or an overly faith driven fiction book (the kind where either
everything is due to the intervention of God or something terrible
happens to someone and in return they find God and share that story with
everyone). Instead, this book seemed to perfectly balance everything. I
really enjoyed reading this book and highly recommend it to everyone. A
more specific book can be found below.
The Space Between Words by Michèle Phoenix
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This
book takes on the seemingly impossible feat of having faith in a time
of terror. The book begins with Jessica, an American girl trying to find
her own way in life, regaining consciousness in a French hospital after
the Paris terrorist attack at the Bataclan. She survived, and wants to
run away from Paris, France and all of Europe as fast as she can, but
her "platonically made for each other" best friend, Patrick, urges her
not to leave and to follow-through with the treasure hunting trip they
planned through southern France before heading back home to Denver.
The
author, Michèle Phoenix, takes on the heaviness of the terror by
stringing together words, each syllable a blow to the gut and the
punctuation at the end of the sentence leaving your breathless. She
flawlessly touches on all the facets of terror from the intentions of
terror, to the sight of terror and the guilt of survival. With regards
to the intentions of terror Phoenix has Patrick tell Jessica that: "The
wanted you to feel so scared you'd never step foot outside again without
looking over your shoulder and expecting more of the awful you've
already been through." Jessica articulates the horrific sights and
feelings of terror: "Death had burned its savagery into the fabric of my
consciousness. I felt stained. Branded." Phoenix also has Jessica
highlight the guilt of survival: "Little was said, but everything was
spoken as the injustice and bliss of survival washed over me in jagged
ways."
However, this story isn't a gruesome recounting
of the events of the terror attack. This story is a relatively light,
and entertaining read about discovering the history behind the faded
documents Jessica found concealed in an antique sewing box. Through the
treasure-hunt plot, the book tackles healing and how "...it's too easy
to blame God for the stupidity of humans." In the end, it leaves the
reader believing too that, as Grant said, "But if there is a God-the
kind that weeps when the weak and powerless get hurt...that there's a
force for good in this world....I want to believe that there's a force
for good in this world and that that force won't let the bad have the
final word. It doesn't explain or undo the darkness, but...I think
somehow it covers it with light."
View all my reviews
This blog is a place where I will share what I'm reading, reviews of the books I have read and my writing muses.
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