Official Review: Gillyflower by Diane Wald
Posted: 13 Jul 2019, 04:08
[Following is an official OnlineBookClub.org review of "Gillyflower" by Diane Wald.]

4 out of 4 stars
Share This Review
Nora Forrest is a woman who seems to have it all: a happy marriage, lovely family members, a decent job, good friends, and health. Nora is also a dreamer and an artist. She dreams about some famous people, like any other fan. One of her idols is Hugh Sheenan, an older Irish actor whose career she has been following for years. When Nora learns that Hugh will appear in a play on Broadway, she is ecstatic. Her mother even gets her tickets on the front row. But something unexpected happens during the play that changes Nora and Hugh.
Gillyflower by Diane Wald is a short fiction novel consisting of 148 pages and published by She Writes Press. The story is told from four different points of views which belong to Nora, Hugh, Rick, and Leon. Rick is Nora’s husband, and Leon is Hugh’s long-time friend and personal assistant. The characters narrate, analyze, and reflect on what happened during and after the play. They also elaborate on their backgrounds, allowing the reader to understand them. For a short novel, Wald did an excellent job giving depth to the characters.
The themes the story covers were my favorite aspect of the book. More than anything, this is a story about the power of unexplainable, almost magical, connections between human beings. Have you ever had an instant connection with a person that feels like it was meant to be? What do you think about it? Is it real? Is it possible? Did the universe conspire to put this person in your life? Wald subtly seduces the reader with the connection that exists between Nora and Hugh.
As the reader follows the story, she or he starts to wonder if what has happened is only a dream. Dreams are another important theme in the story. Wald makes the reader question whether we have the right to make our dreams come true or if these are meant to remain in the abstract world. More than that, the reader ends up wondering if logic puts us off of our dreams. After all, human beings are fearful of the things that they cannot rationalize.
I also found it interesting that Wald chose to write the story from different points of view because it allowed the reader to understand the characters and know what they thought and felt about the situation. Reading Rick’s point of view, for example, filled me with curiosity. I wanted to know if he understood what was happening to his wife or if he was the kind of person who cannot see beyond his ego.
Wald’s writing is rich and seductive, and I have no complaints about it. I did not find grammatical errors in the book, but I did find more than ten spacing issues. These, however, do not detract the reader for getting immersed in the story. The only thing I did not like was that Hugh was too old for my taste.
I rate Gillyflower by Diane Wald 4 out of 4 stars because it is about the dreamlike, rare connections human beings make with other human beings. These extraordinary, yet intense, connections put reason to the test and make people feel alive. Wald’s Gillyflower reminds us of this phenomenon. I did not deduct a star because an editor can quickly fix the spacing issues for the next edition of the book. I would recommend this novel to fans of romance and dreams, and those who believe in invisible ties that defy comprehension.
******
Gillyflower
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon

4 out of 4 stars
Share This Review
Nora Forrest is a woman who seems to have it all: a happy marriage, lovely family members, a decent job, good friends, and health. Nora is also a dreamer and an artist. She dreams about some famous people, like any other fan. One of her idols is Hugh Sheenan, an older Irish actor whose career she has been following for years. When Nora learns that Hugh will appear in a play on Broadway, she is ecstatic. Her mother even gets her tickets on the front row. But something unexpected happens during the play that changes Nora and Hugh.
Gillyflower by Diane Wald is a short fiction novel consisting of 148 pages and published by She Writes Press. The story is told from four different points of views which belong to Nora, Hugh, Rick, and Leon. Rick is Nora’s husband, and Leon is Hugh’s long-time friend and personal assistant. The characters narrate, analyze, and reflect on what happened during and after the play. They also elaborate on their backgrounds, allowing the reader to understand them. For a short novel, Wald did an excellent job giving depth to the characters.
The themes the story covers were my favorite aspect of the book. More than anything, this is a story about the power of unexplainable, almost magical, connections between human beings. Have you ever had an instant connection with a person that feels like it was meant to be? What do you think about it? Is it real? Is it possible? Did the universe conspire to put this person in your life? Wald subtly seduces the reader with the connection that exists between Nora and Hugh.
As the reader follows the story, she or he starts to wonder if what has happened is only a dream. Dreams are another important theme in the story. Wald makes the reader question whether we have the right to make our dreams come true or if these are meant to remain in the abstract world. More than that, the reader ends up wondering if logic puts us off of our dreams. After all, human beings are fearful of the things that they cannot rationalize.
I also found it interesting that Wald chose to write the story from different points of view because it allowed the reader to understand the characters and know what they thought and felt about the situation. Reading Rick’s point of view, for example, filled me with curiosity. I wanted to know if he understood what was happening to his wife or if he was the kind of person who cannot see beyond his ego.
Wald’s writing is rich and seductive, and I have no complaints about it. I did not find grammatical errors in the book, but I did find more than ten spacing issues. These, however, do not detract the reader for getting immersed in the story. The only thing I did not like was that Hugh was too old for my taste.
I rate Gillyflower by Diane Wald 4 out of 4 stars because it is about the dreamlike, rare connections human beings make with other human beings. These extraordinary, yet intense, connections put reason to the test and make people feel alive. Wald’s Gillyflower reminds us of this phenomenon. I did not deduct a star because an editor can quickly fix the spacing issues for the next edition of the book. I would recommend this novel to fans of romance and dreams, and those who believe in invisible ties that defy comprehension.
******
Gillyflower
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon