tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1712297166269296113.post7264347656100414029..comments2023-10-07T21:06:31.440+02:00Comments on Ciska's Book Chest: Review: The Wednesday Daughters, Meg Waite ClaytonCiskahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08879503352825771111noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1712297166269296113.post-76459465976580177702013-07-08T17:40:03.223+02:002013-07-08T17:40:03.223+02:00I stand corrected it indeed says at that part that...I stand corrected it indeed says at that part that the story is discussed afterwards. <br /><br />With this knowledge I read to the first part which I remember being annoyed with which is the chapter where Anna Page wakes Julie and she is thinking about the conversation she had with Jamie and I still cannot see this told from Hopes perspective. For me this feels as if it is told from Julies perspective and as Hope is not involved there at all it does not click in my head that she is telling the story now making it difficult for me to really connect there. Ciskahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08879503352825771111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1712297166269296113.post-69094712808831173082013-07-08T02:45:52.940+02:002013-07-08T02:45:52.940+02:00>without any indication that Hope wrote down th...>without any indication that Hope wrote down the story afterwards<br /><br />You might want to read a little more carefully -- e.g., p. 11 "As with much of this story, what I know of the rest of that evening ... I know from the REHASHING AFTERWARDS. We Wednesday Daughters, like our mothers, love to tell stories on ourselves."<br /><br />The story is told from the retrospective more than a year later, after the friends have extensively discussed the events of the trip.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com