Monday, February 22, 2010
Dream House by Valerie Laken, Book Tour and Review
When I was asked to participate in the TLC Book Tour for this book I jumped at the chance as soon as I read the synopsis:
When Kate and Stuart Kinzler buy a run-down historic home in Ann Arbor, Michigan, they're hoping their grand renovation project can rescue their troubled marriage. Instead, they discover that years ago their home was the scene of a terrible crime-and the revelation tips the balance of their precarious union.
When a mysterious man begins lurking around her yard, Kate, now alone, is forced to confront her home's dangerous past. Hers is not the only life that has crumbled under this roof. This man's family also disintegrated here, as the result of one brief act of rage that may haunt him-and this house-for years to come.
Sounds good, right? Thankfully I can report that it was good, and not what I was expecting at all. For some reason I was thinking there was actually going to be a haunted house, don't ask why, I'm not really sure where I got that impression from. I think I was a little tired when I first read the description.
A lot of the reviews I've read have tended to focus on Kate, and while you would probably consider her the "main" character, I found myself connecting to and understanding Stuart way more that it seems others have. Here was a man, who's biggest flaw was the lack of any real sense self esteem. He never thought he was good enough for Kate, he was always thinking that someday she would realize the truth and disappear. How any man can be expected to function on a real level, when that thought is eating away at you, is beyond me. So of course he wouldn't want their life to change in any real way, because if it did, she may realize that she's moved beyond him. She would find out that she would be better off without him. So I understood why he was so unhappy with buying a house and moving away from their apartment, which was near the campus they first met. The relationship, while it may be slowly dying, was stable there. It was home.
So when Kate throws herself into remodeling the home, he never wanted, he feels her pulling away from him. Of course he never thought about this being her way of trying to not only reconnect their slowly dying marriage, but as a way to find a place where she truly belonged. I found Kate to be pretty emotionally closed to almost everyone in her life, she simply doesn't let anyone in, even when she thinks she has. Now that doesn't help Stuart's issues because he sees this as a validation of his fears. And like all fears they just keep feeding in on themselves. So when he loses his job, his sense of self is obliterated. Any sense of being the man Kate needed walked out the door, so he followed. I'm not sure how many men or women in his place wouldn't do the same thing. When every fear you've ever had comes true, your first response is to run. I'm not saying it's the right choice or the morally correct thing to do, but I understood it.
This was a intimate look at people who are struggling to find themselves and a place to call home, both physically and emotionally. The backdrop of the "murder" years prior to Kate and Stuart moving in and how the players in that initial tragedy interact and influence current events was expertly meshed together and added a dimension to the book that I would have missed had it not been there.
Now everything I just typed could be the exact opposite of what Valerie Laken was trying to get across in her beautifully written book, but it's what I took away from it and I'm very happy that I was given the chance to read it. I am looking forward to reading more by her in the future. Please stop by and visit Valerie Laken at her website.
I would like to thank Trish at TLC Book Tours for the opportunity to read and review this book and I am looking forward to future tours.
You can check out other stops on the tour by clicking on the links:
Monday, February 1st: Stephanie’s Written Word
Thursday, February 4th: One Person’s Journey Through a World of Books
Tuesday, February 9th: lit*chick
Wednesday, February 10th: I’m Booking It
Monday, February 15th: Devourer of Books
Wednesday, February 17th: Educating Petunia
Thursday, February 18th: Dolce Bellezza
Monday, February 22nd: Wordsmithonia
Wednesday, February 24th: The Book Zombie
Thursday, February 25th: All About {n}
Labels:
Book Tours,
General Fiction,
Reviews
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