5/18/2023 0 Comments Salvage the bones review![]() ![]() The only resolution is that Esch does see that her quest for love, like Medea’s, was not going to turn out quite the way she would have scripted it. This book gets good at the climax during the action of the flooding but then just fizzles out. The name of the homestead “the Pit” was confusing especially when used in the same sentence as the pit bull dogs. Unfortunately, the plotting wasnt terribly exciting, and that doesnt bother. The narrator comparing her own life to the story of Medea may have been a stretch, but may be believable from a histrionic fourteen year old’s point of view. The writing has a lyrical, poetic quality that I really both enjoyed and admired. She also brings in a common theme of an adolescent girl making poor choices about which boy she will pursue and mistaking sex for love. The author captured the voice of a fourteen year old girl well in that most 14 year olds know how pregnancy occurs but think that it will not happen to them. I did like the various themes on motherhood as seen in the mother dog, Esch’s mother who had died, and how Esch would have to come to terms with her own unexpected pregnancy. I also had difficulty connecting the dog fights with the rest of the story. ![]() ![]() Although there were many things needing rescue or salvaging, none of these things made me think of bones. The title “Salvage the Bones” was intriguing to me, but I do not understand the connection of the title with the narrative. ![]()
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