The Gargoyle
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Loved this book but I felt a little unsettled when finished...thoughts?
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Farrah
(last edited May 17, 2011 01:06PM)
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rated it 4 stars
May 17, 2011 01:06PM

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I agree Jackleen. If anything, the story is memorable and pops up in my head often. As an author, you can't ask for a better reaction.

I am a nurse and I was taking a course to work in the operating room while reading this book. Burn patient need frequent skin graphs and are often seen in the OR. Usually, the writer will get medical terms and techniques mostly right but there is always the "that's not really how it works" feeling when reading a book. In Gargoyle, the medical aspect was perfectly correct. In fact I probably did better in my course for having read the book.


Just stumbled across this discussion regarding "The Gargoyle", which I loved and found mesmerizing - I too felt somewhat unsettled, but I wondered if it was due in part to my questioning whether Marianne was deluded or if indeed her story(ies) was based in reality.
I wondered about Katherine's statement regarding - a guy wrote it - I wasn't really clear on why it made a difference...btw, I'm a woman.
It would be interesting if anyone felt the ending would have been different if a woman wrote it - would it have been an automatic happily ever after - would there still be some questions and uncertainty as to who or what Marianne is or was?
Any thoughts or reactions?



For me, I saw it as their continual cycle of
meeting-->loving-->leaving - to begin it again in the next life (if she wasn't deluded). I admit it as been awhile since I read it, but for me it was in keeping with their eternal cosmic loop - also, I felt that he did feel she renewed his will to live and that he felt a sense of loss - or I could be remembering this all wrong and need to read it again. ;-D
I appreciate the clarification. It is an interesting book and I lent to a friend who has yet to return it. Hmmm, I better follow up on it.
Farrah, I don't like HEA all the time either and I certainly didn't mean to imply it was an automatic for all women - just throwing out questions to stimulate dialogue.
Thank you, Katherine and Farrah. I appreciate the responses.





Thanks for your post~validates my feelings. I still think about The Gargoyle and it's been "months" since I read it. It's one of my top favorites.

By the way, I have recommended this book to several people and they all loved it too.

Farrah wrote: "I read this book shortly after it came out and loved it. It's written beautifully, with amazing imagery, shocking scenes...it's fresh and just magical. It breaks the rules of the traditional love s..."


@Danggirl - Thanks for the note/reference to what I was getting at...I still love this book and still think about it.
Best,
Katherine Owen

It is a book that I cherish, and while I speak well of it, I recommend it to few. I will not hand it to the customer who craves whatever Patterson puts his name on, or the one who lives for the latest Danielle Steel I have, sorry to admit, used it as a measure of men I have dated. Yes, I should not be in the dating pool, and a good thing that is for I have more time to read.
Kat wrote: "Smiles...this was a book I had no real desire to read. But, as bookseller, someone there had to. And, was my lucky day when I opened it. It is easily in the top five of my now 200 favorites.
It is ..."
Kat, reading your post one thing doesn't make sense: if this book's amongst your favourites, why did you only give it 1 star? That's what we're supposed to use for really bad books (that I still finished...)
It is ..."
Kat, reading your post one thing doesn't make sense: if this book's amongst your favourites, why did you only give it 1 star? That's what we're supposed to use for really bad books (that I still finished...)
I absolutely loved this book. I won't even try to trace the aspects I enjoyed so much about it, for I have read it quite a while ago. I don't think I would be able to recall what made it so addictive. And...like any drug, it seems impossible to detach from the whole experience; that is the reason for the "unsettled" feeling.
I have just remembered having read a review which revealed two acrostics that can be found by putting the first letter of each chapter together in order and then the last letter of each chapter, spelling out "All things in a single book bound by love" (from Dante's "Paradiso"), respectively a phrase in German which means “Love is as strong as death, Marianne”. I found this pretty interesting.
I have just remembered having read a review which revealed two acrostics that can be found by putting the first letter of each chapter together in order and then the last letter of each chapter, spelling out "All things in a single book bound by love" (from Dante's "Paradiso"), respectively a phrase in German which means “Love is as strong as death, Marianne”. I found this pretty interesting.

Stelly37 wrote: "The only unsettling thing at the end for me, was that it was over. I loved it, couldn't put it down and was left thinking "oh no, what am I going to do now - come back!""
I would have never done that to Marianne at the end. I would have stopped her! She could choose to see that as selfishness all she wants, I wouldn't care!
I would have never done that to Marianne at the end. I would have stopped her! She could choose to see that as selfishness all she wants, I wouldn't care!
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