Selected Product: | The Sight of the Stars Mass Market Author: Belva Plain Publisher: Dell Release Date: 2004-11-23 ISBN-10: 0440241243 ISBN-13: 9780440241249 List Price: $7.99 Average Customer Rating: | | Looking Back ISBN-10: 0440235774 ISBN-13: 9780440235774 List Price:$7.99 Legacy of Silence ISBN-10: 0440226406 ISBN-13: 9780440226406 List Price:$7.99 Secrecy ISBN-10: 0440225116 ISBN-13: 9780440225119 List Price:$7.99 After the Fire ISBN-10: 044023574X ISBN-13: 9780440235743 List Price:$7.99 Her Father's House ISBN-10: 0440235804 ISBN-13: 9780440235804 List Price:$7.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Sight of the Stars by Belva Plain (ISBN-10: 0440241243, ISBN-13: 9780440241249). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Sight of the Stars by Belva Plain (ISBN-10: 0440241243, ISBN-13: 9780440241249). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com New York Times bestselling author Belva Plain beguiles us once again with a novel that explores the bonds that sustain families—and the lies that can shatter them forever. Sweeping through the pivotal events of twentieth-century America, The Sight of the Stars chronicles four generations of one remarkable family as they journey through years of love, loss, sacrifice, and unimaginable betrayal.
Dressed in a brand-new suit, with one hundred and fifty dollars in his pocket, Adam Arnring says good-bye to his family and boards a train for the fabled West. The year is 1907. Adam is nineteen years old, a young man with stars in his eyes who has always dreamed of a future in the great open spaces of America. Now, far from his New Jersey home, he takes the first step toward attaining that dream, landing a job in a small department store in a booming Texas town. Here he meets a woman who excites him beyond all measure. The exquisite, untouchable Emma Rothirsch lives in a world whose doors are firmly closed to him. But Adam is a man willing to take great risks to get what he wants.
One is Emma. The other is to build a lasting business enterprise that will live on through his children and grandchildren. But just when Adam’s dreams are within reach, fate intervenes. Tragedy strikes from the trenches of World War I, setting in motion a series of events that echo down through the years. The owner of a prospering department store and the head of a growing family, Adam succumbs to a moment of weakness that culminates in an unforgivable act of betrayal. And now, as another generation prepares to take its rightful place in the family’s legendary empire, the tenuous threads of the Arnrings’ past begin to unravel, revealing a shattering secret that reaches back nearly a century.
Across a teeming canvas of history, through world wars and the close of a century, The Sight of the Stars tells a deeply affecting story of family and forgiveness, guilt and redemption. Brimming with the emotional depth and moral complexity we have come to expect from this incomparable storyteller, The Sight of the Stars is about what happens when we dare to dream, and the moments that can change families forever.
From the Hardcover edition. Winner!! | Customer Rating: | | I picked up this book and read it in two day. It was so refreshing to read this well written story. I thoroughly enjoyed it. | Who Are You Really? | Customer Rating: | I thought this was a very good book but it reminded me of a soap opera with the secrets, the blackmail, the strange family relationships and the adultery. The main character, Adam Arnring, leaves his father's grocery store business to go west into business at a small department store which he grew into a major business. Then he had some romance with the store's adopted daughter and a fling with a dressmaker. It definitely held my interest and has a surprise ending. The theme seemed to be that we never really know people like we think we do.
Karen Arlettaz Zemek, author of "My Funny Dad, Harry" | Wonderful Book misunderstood by reviewers | Customer Rating: | | I read all the reviews and was astounded that no one seemed to see what Belva Plain was doing with this little book at all. I haven't read "Evergreen" but it hardly seems fair to knock Sight of the Stars for not being another book that you loved. I was about 3/4 of the way through the book on a plane flight from Paris to the US when I realized what the author's theme was and how skillfully she had woven her revelation of it through the lives of the Amring family members. Readers who were dissapointed with the "boring" plot and lack of a deep dark secret in brother Leo's life entirely missed the point. Or rather I should say, they demonstrate the point; which is, that it is all too easy for us poor humans to misjudge one another and miss the truth of the lives of the people we interact with. Adam makes a preliminary mistake in his assessment of every important character he deals with. His life teaches him how he was wrong and he grows wiser and more humble until in the end, just before he dies, he is willing to admit that perhaps he was wrong about Leo too. Perhaps he should forgive his brother and find him. Adam discovers this too late for a reconcilliation but the reader is allowed to see the "truth" about Leo. It is brillantly done, for the reader is brought to realize that perhaps they too had been wrong about Leo, imagining all sorts of dark perverted things about him when in fact his books were simply his refuge and the way he taught himself foreign languages etc. Those who were dissapointed that there was not some horridly wicked revelation about Leo in the end REALLY missed the point. The book is not meant to be one of those sagas that leaves you feeling as if you were forever entertwined with characters in them who had been brillantly brought to life. Rather, reading it is like solving an intellectual puzzle of masks and characters and motives revealed so that the reader turns from that puzzle instructed and more humble about the characters that inhabit his own real life and asks himself, "Do I know these people as they truly are?" In the end the puzzle for me became more than just intellectual and became profoundly moving, even spiritual. I loved this book for the way it stretched my mind and heart. | Belva, You Go Girl ! | Customer Rating: | I am new to Belva Plain novels. I recently read "Looking Back" and I loved it (see my reviews). I then purchased "The Sight of the Stars" and placed it at the bottom of my "to read" stack, but after reading only one book after "Looking Back" I couldn't wait, I had to go to the bottom of the stack and pull out "Stars." I am glad that I did as this lady can write. This story was wonderful, I especially enjoyed the character of Adam. Belva can write a family saga like nobody's business. I hear that three of her other novels: "Evergreen", "The Golden Cup," and "Tapestry" are a series of books covering one families story. I have already ordered them and look forward to the cold winter nights ahead sitting in front of my fireplace reading another one of her "dishy" family sagas (only if it snowed in Los Angeles). How wonderful it would be to be snowed in with a fire in the hearth, lots of hot chocolate, and a stack of Belva's stories. I give this story a 4 star rating as I felt the story was a little rushed at the end. Highly recommended however. Guy V. De Rosa Los Angeles | What happened to the author of Evergreen? | Customer Rating: | | I have to say that this is one of the most disappointing books I have ever purchased. It was an incredibly bland story, with absolutely no point. Honestly; there was one paragraph that essentially read... "she got sick, she got sicker, she was really sick, she died." And that was about one of the primary characters. There was really nothing endearing about the characters, nothing memorable about the plot. Frankly, I'm surprised at myself for finishing the book (if it wasn't summertime I probably would have dumped it by the middle of the book). |
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