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Shine Shine Shine: A Novel Kindle Edition
A New York Times Notable Book!
"Over the moon with a metaphysical spin. Heart-tugging…it is struggling to understand the physical realities of life and the nature of what makes us human….Nicely unpredictable…Extraordinary." —Janet Maslin, The New York Times
When Maxon met Sunny, he was seven years, four months, and eighteen-days old. Or, he was 2693 rotations of the earth old. Maxon was different. Sunny was different. They were different together.
Now, twenty years later, they are married, and Sunny wants, more than anything, to be "normal." She's got the housewife thing down perfectly, but Maxon, a genius engineer, is on a NASA mission to the moon, programming robots for a new colony. Once they were two outcasts who found unlikely love in each other: a wondrous, strange relationship formed from urgent desire for connection. But now they're parents to an autistic son. And Sunny is pregnant again. And her mother is dying in the hospital. Their marriage is on the brink of imploding, and they're at each other's throats with blame and fear. What exactly has gone wrong?
Sunny wishes Maxon would turn the rocket around and come straight-the-hell home.
When an accident in space puts the mission in peril, everything Sunny and Maxon have built hangs in the balance. Dark secrets, long-forgotten murders, and a blond wig all come tumbling to the light. And nothing will ever be the same.…
A debut of singular power and intelligence, Shine Shine Shine is a unique love story, an adventure between worlds, and a stunning novel of love, death, and what it means to be human.
Shine Shine Shine is a New York Times Notable Book of 2012.
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Editorial Reviews
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Review
“While Jackson conveys all the book's humor, her reading is also full of empathy, and she brings out the characters' underlying humanity. This masterful, flawless narration of an imaginative novel is something special and not to be missed.” ―Publishers Weekly on Shine Shine Shine, a Publishers Weekly ‘Best Audiobook of the Year', 2012
“Not only entertaining, but nuanced and wise…blending wit and imagination with an oddly mesmerizing, matter-of-fact cadence, Netzer's debut is a delightfully unique love story and a resounding paean to individuality.” ―People (People Pick)
“Netzer's storytelling method is as poetic as her language. She slowly assembles a multitude of pinpoint insights that converge to form a glimmering constellation...a stellar, thought-provoking debut” ―The New York Times Book Review
“Over the moon with a metaphysical spin. Heart-tugging…it is struggling to understand the physical realities of life and the nature of what makes us human….Nicely unpredictable…Extraordinary.” ―Janet Maslin, The New York Times
“You're pulled into the drama through the incredible natural beauty of her writing … deftly and wittily done … people say her style reminds them of Anne Tyler, but she reminded me a little bit more of Don DeLillo.” ―Liesl Schillinger, The New York Times Book Review Podcast
“Entirely winning…a refreshingly weird story about the exuberant weirdness of familial love.” ―The Wall Street Journal
“Netzer deftly illuminates the bonds that transcend shortcomings and tragedy. Characterized by finely textured emotions and dramatic storytelling, Netzer's world will draw readers happily into its orbit.” ―Publishers Weekly
“Netzer has beautifully crafted an original story with a cast of characters who make up an unconventional but strangely believable family...This story will shine, shine, shine for all adult readers.” ―Library Journal, starred review
“The novel traces Maxon and Sunny's relationship from their childhoods in Burma and Appalachia to outer space, revealing the futility of chasing an ideal of what's normal…Shine Shine Shine breaks free of the gravitational pull of traditional romantic clichés.” ―The Washington Post
“Lydia Netzer's luminous debut novel concerns what lies beneath society's pretty surfaces -- Sunny's congenital hairlessness, her husband's remoteness, their son's autism. What makes it unexpectedly moving is how skillfully Netzer then peels back those layers, finding heartbreaking depth even in characters who lack ordinary social skills.” ―The Boston Globe
“Netzer has penned a modern take on alienation, building a family, making connections -- creating memorable characters and an odd, idiosyncratic, but highly believable narrative along the way.” ―The Toronto Star
“Netzer uses [Sunny and Maxon] to explore the limits of love, family and what it is that makes us human and to create a tale that is utterly compelling and original.” ―Chatelaine
“There are certain novels that are just twisty, delightfully so. Shine Shine Shine is one. In this first novel, Lydia Netzer takes a hard look at being completely human through the eyes of two people who are kinda not…Shine Shine Shine may ask an old question. But Netzer's answer to how to be who you are is fresh from the heart.” ―New York Daily News
“Netzer's first novel, the wacky, touching and deliciously readable Shine Shine Shine, draws heavily on her own unconventional life…this unassuming novelist… is the ‘it' girl of contemporary literature.” ―Kerry Dougherty, The Virginian Pilot
“[Sunny and Maxon's] peculiarities form an endearing story in Shine Shine Shine, Norfolk resident Lydia Netzer's first -- and amazingly inventive -- novel. . . . Netzer's munificence of spirit lights her story with compassion. . . . Shine Shine Shine transcends not only geography, whether in Burma, Pennsylvania, Norfolk or outer space, but also the science and the struggles, the weirdness and the woe; it aims straight for the heart and the humanity that unites us all. Netzer, whose imagination knows no limits, infuses her debut with love -- and reminds us that normalcy can be vastly overrated.” ―The Richmond Times-Dispatch
“This is a novel about the strangeness of being human. Lydia Netzer says she wrote it when she was pregnant with her first child and feeling "paralysed with fear that I was too weird, too self-absorbed, too unskilled to have a child, and that whatever baby had the bad luck to be born of my uterus would be permanently scarred by my failings". Hopefully, she feels better now. Or at least, a lot less alone in her imagined weirdness. After meeting Sunny and Maxon, I know I do.” ―The Independent
“Shine Shine Shine is a novel…but "Shine, Shine, Shine" could easily refer to Netzer's writing abilities, the way she handles the craft of storytelling, and the way her novel captures and holds the reader's attention…Netzer is a master storyteller. She leads the reader through a landscape full of beauty and charged with pitfalls, actual and emotional, while holding your eyes to the page, and your fingers itching to turn to the next page.” ―Sparkling Diversity column, The Virginian Pilot
“At its considerable heart, Shine Shine Shine is about birth, and as such it is profoundly a feminine novel. Netzer keeps the novel nicely balanced and accessible to male readers, however, by dissociating birth from purely biological terms and recasting it as psychological, spiritual, sexual and technological. It's a heady plateful to be sure, but Netzer handles it with a strong voice.” ―Brent Andrew Bowles, The Virginian Pilot
“I can't say enough good things about Shine Shine Shine, and it's almost impossible to put the book down once you crack it open. Well-paced, well-plotted, and told with a fresh, lyrical and bold narrative style, Netzer's debut novel is compelling, smart, strange and enjoyable. It shines as brightly as Sunny's bald head and the luminous stars Maxon sees in space.” ―Sarah Rachel Egelman, TheBookReporter.com
“Shine Shine Shine is an exquisitely written debut novel about family. All of Netzer's characters are quirky and unique, as well as damaged. Not every novel features a bald Caucasian woman, born in Burma, who is married to a rocket scientist on the autism spectrum. Even so, Shine Shine Shine is never quirky for the sake of quirkiness -- Sunny, Maxon and all of the supporting characters are fully fledged and realistic so that they draw the reader in almost immediately with their strong and life-like voices. A story of personal growth and discovery that is unlike any you have read before, Shine Shine Shine will not fail to entertain and move you.” ―SheKnows.com
“A funny, compelling love story from the freshest voice I've heard in years. Shine Shine Shine picked me up and left me changed in ways I never expected. Intelligent, emotional, and relentlessly new, Netzer answers questions you didn't know you were already asking and delivers an unforgettable take on what it means to love, to be a mother, and to be human.” ―Sara Gruen, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Water for Elephants and Ape House
“From the icy dead surface of the moon to the hot center of the human heart, Lydia Netzer's debut novel takes you on a rocket ride that will rattle your bones. Part science fiction, part pure magic of the human kind, Netzer makes a book that is wholly her own, and endlessly fascinating. At every turn, you think she cannot astonish you again, and then she does it one more time. And then again and again and again. This is an astounding first novel by a writer who is unique in her immense gifts.” ―Robert Goolrick, #1 New York Times bestselling author of A Reliable Wife
“Creating one of the most compelling protagonists I've read in a long time, Lydia Netzer manages to capture the outsider in each of us. Whether looking at the moon, a child, the suburban landscape, or the face in the mirror, Netzer shows us something we've never seen before, something we thought we knew. A beautifully written story where the exception proves the rule: the things that seem to divide us are, ultimately, the very things that unite us.” ―Brunonia Barry, New York Times bestselling author of The Lace Reader and The Map of True Places.
“A perfectly structured gem of a book that held me spellbound as I unraveled the twisted histories of this unconventional family. You've never read anything like it, and yet Sunny's story is every woman's story. We are all outsiders, all alone in space, all trying so hard to find a place called home. I loved this book.” ―Joshilyn Jackson, New York Times bestselling author of Gods in Alabama and Backseat Saints
“An astronaut, an autistic child, a bald woman and a meteor collide, churning up the ground around a couple of decades-old murders. Life and death intersect in this wildly inventive love story I will be talking about and thinking about for years to come. If Yann Martel and Mary Gaitskill had a literary baby, it would look a lot like Lydia Netzer.” ―Karen Abbott, New York Times bestselling author of Sin in the Second City and American Rose
About the Author
LYDIA NETZER was born in Detroit and educated in the Midwest. She lives in Virginia with her two home-schooled children and math-making husband. When she isn't teaching, reading, or writing her next novel, she plays the guitar in a rock band.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
1
Deep in darkness, there was a tiny light. Inside the light, he floated in a spaceship. It felt cold to him, floating there. Inside his body, he felt the cold of space. He could still look out the round windows of the rocket and see the Earth. He could also see the moon sometimes, coming closer. The Earth rotated slowly and the spaceship moved slowly, relative to the things that were around it. There was nothing he could do now, one way or the other. He was part of a spaceship going to the moon. He wore white paper booties instead of shoes. He wore a jumpsuit instead of underwear. He was only a human, of scant flesh and long bone, eyes clouded, and body breakable. He was off, launched from the Earth, and floating in space. He had been pushed, with force, away.
But in his mind, Maxon found himself thinking of home. With his long feet drifting out behind him, he put his hands on each side of the round window, and held on to it. He looked out and down at the Earth. Far away, across the cold miles, the Earth lay boiling in clouds. All the countries of the Earth lay smudged together under that lace of white. Beneath this stormy layer, the cities of this world chugged and burned, connected by roads, connected by wires. Down in Virginia, his wife, Sunny, was walking around, living and breathing. Beside her was his small son. Inside her was his small daughter. He couldn’t see them, but he knew they were there.
This is the story of an astronaut who was lost in space, and the wife he left behind. Or this is the story of a brave man who survived the wreck of the first rocket sent into space with the intent to colonize the moon. This is the story of the human race, who pushed one crazy little splinter of metal and a few pulsing cells up into the vast dark reaches of the universe, in the hope that the splinter would hit something and stick, and that the little pulsing cells could somehow survive. This is the story of a bulge, a bud, the way the human race tried to subdivide, the bud it formed out into the universe, and what happened to that bud, and what happened to the Earth, too, the mother Earth, after the bud was burst.
* * *
IN A HISTORIC DISTRICT of Norfolk, on the coast of Virginia, in the sumptuous kitchen of a restored Georgian palace, three blond heads bent over a granite island. One of them was Sunny’s head. Hers was the blondest. The modest light shone down on them from above, where copper pots hung in dull and perfect rows. Polished cabinetry lined the walls; and a farmhouse sink dipped into the counter, reproduced in stainless steel. A garden window above it housed living herbs. The sun shone. The granite was warm. The ice maker could produce round or square crystals. Each of the women perched on stools at the kitchen island had long straight hair, meticulously flattened or gently curled. They clustered around the smallest one, who was crying. She clutched her mug of tea with both hands where it sat on the countertop, and her shoulders shook while she boo-hooed into it. Her friends smoothed her hair, wiped her eyes. Sunny smoothed her own hair and wiped her eyes.
“I just don’t understand it,” said the small one, sniffing. “He said he was going to take me to Norway this summer. To Norway!”
“Norway,” echoed the one in the lime green cardigan. She rolled her eyes. “What a joke.” She had a hooked nose and small eyes, but from her blowout and makeup, her trim figure and expensive shoes, people still knew that she was attractive. Her name was Rachel, but the girls called her Rache. She was the first one on the block to have a really decent home gym.
“No, I want to go to Norway!” the little one corrected her. “My people are from there! It’s beautiful! There are fjords.”
“Jenny, it’s not about Norway, honey,” said Rache, the smooth loops and fronds of her golden hair cascading down her front and onto her tanned and curvy chest as she leaned over. “You’re getting distracted.”
“No,” said Jenny, sobbing anew. “It’s about that bitch he’s fooling around with. Who is she? He won’t tell me!”
Sunny pulled back from them. She wore a chenille wrap around her shoulders and operated the machines of her kitchen with one hand while the other rested on her pregnant belly. She went for the teakettle, freshened Jenny’s tea, and handed her a tissue. These were Sunny’s best friends, Jenny and Rache. She knew that they were having a normal conversation, this conversation about Jenny’s husband and his infidelity. It was a normal thing to talk about. But as she stood there in her usual spot, one hand on the teakettle, one hand on her belly, she noticed an alarming thing: a crack in the wall right next to the pantry. A crack in this old Georgian wall.
“It’s not really about her either, Jenny, whoever she is,” said Rache. Sunny gave Rache a stern glance behind the other woman’s head. Rache returned it with eyebrows raised in innocence.
“He’s a jerk,” Jenny said. “That’s what it’s about.” And she blew her nose.
Sunny wondered if her friends had noticed the crack. It raged up the wall, crossing the smooth expanse of buttercream-colored plaster, ripping it asunder. The crack had not been there yesterday, and it already looked wide. It looked deep. She thought about the house, split down a terrible zigzag, one half of the pantry split from the other. Bags of organic lentils. Mason jars of beets. Root vegetables. What would she do?
But Jenny wasn’t done crying. “I just don’t know what I’m going to do!” she burbled for the third time. “I have the children to think of ! How could he let me find this out? How could he not be more careful?”
Sunny imagined the house falling apart, with her as the fault line. Maybe with Maxon in space, the house had given up on maintaining appearances. Maybe it would crumble into the earth without him, without the person standing in the husband spot. Everything changes, everything falls: Jenny’s husband, rockets to the moon, the wall containing the pantry.
“Shh,” said Rache. She reached for the remote, turned up the volume on the kitchen TV. Sunny saw that the microwave read 12:00. She pulled the wrap tightly around her and two fingers fluffed up the bangs on her forehead. On the screen, the news was starting up.
“Oh,” said Jenny. “Time for Les Weathers.”
“Now there’s a man who would never do you wrong,” said Rache, cocking her head and winking at the set. The women watched wordlessly for a few minutes while a tall blond man with a squared-off face and twinkling blue eyes reported on a local fire. He leaned just so, into his desk, and he used his broad hands to gesticulate. His concern over the fire appeared real, his admiration for the firemen tangible. He had a bulky torso, heavy on top like a trapezoid, with big arms. He was more than just a suit on the television, though; he was relevant and immediate to them, because he lived three doors down, in an immaculate gray townhouse, behind a thick red door.
“He’s like Hercules,” said Jenny through her tears. “That’s what he reminds me of. Les Weathers is Hercules.”
“In makeup,” said Sunny dryly.
“You love him!” Rache accused.
“Shut up. I’m not one of his worshippers,” Sunny said. “The only time I’ve ever really talked to him at all was when I asked him to take that wreath down in January.”
“Not true! He was at the Halloween party at Jessica’s!” Jenny said, momentarily forgetting her troubles. “Plus he interviewed you on TV, when Maxon was doing PR for the mission!”
“I meant talked to him alone,” Sunny said. She stood with her legs wide. She could feel, or could she not feel, a tremor in the house. In the crawl space, something was reverberating. Something was coming undone. A train passed too close, and the crack widened. It reached the crown molding. Is this what labor would feel like? Last time, she had an epidural, and gave birth with her lipstick perfectly applied. This time she planned to have an even bigger epidural, and give birth in pearls.
“I’ve never talked to him alone,” said Rache, still coy, imitating Sunny. “You must be his girlfriend.”
“Can we not talk about girlfriends?” Sunny said, nodding pointedly at Jenny.
“I should give Les Weathers a call,” Jenny murmured, her eyes glued to the set. “All alone in that nice house nursing a broken heart.”
On the TV set, Les Weathers smiled with two rows of glittering white teeth, and tossed to his coanchor with a line of jockish banter.
“Don’t call him,” said Rache. “Don’t give your husband any more excuses.”
“He has excuses?” said Jenny.
A commercial for diapers began.
“Anyway,” said Sunny, clearing away the teacups, “I need to pick up Bubber from school, and get to the hospital to see Mom.”
“How is your mom?” Rache asked. The ladies rose from their stools, pulled themselves together. Cuffs were straightened, and cotton cardigans buttoned.
“She’s fine,” said Sunny. “Totally fine. You can almost see her getting better, every single day.”
“But I thought she was on life support,” said Jenny.
“Yes, and it’s working,” Sunny told them.
She rushed them out the door, and returning to the kitchen she inspected the crack with her fingers. It was not bad. It was not growing. Maybe it had been there all along. Maybe she just hadn’t seen it climbing up, up, stretching right across her house and her li...
From AudioFile
Product details
- ASIN : B006ZL9DRO
- Publisher : St. Martin's Press; Reprint edition (July 17, 2012)
- Publication date : July 17, 2012
- Language : English
- File size : 2.9 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 336 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #715,886 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #4,048 in Psychological Fiction (Kindle Store)
- #4,785 in Mothers & Children Fiction
- #5,345 in Exploration Science Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Lydia Netzer was born in Detroit and educated in the Midwest. She lives in Virginia with her two home-schooled children and husband, her Boston terriers and her Morgan horse. Find her on Facebook, Twitter (@lostcheerio) and at http://www.lydianetzer.com.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this novel delightful to read, praising its brilliant writing and interesting characters. The book is well-developed and surprising in detail, with one customer noting its unique perspective. While customers describe the story as compelling, some mention it rambles and has major plot holes. Customers appreciate the book's empathy, with one noting how basic emotions and actions are recognizable, and find it worth the read.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book delightful to read, describing it as a magnificent and interesting novel.
"...I really enjoyed this book. My only complaint is with the ending...." Read more
"...This book was great in the sense that it highlighted a relationship that you don't see all the time, if ever and is not one you're going to get to..." Read more
"...The answer to the second question is no spoiler: it looks like real love, with all the usual hard work, and some unusual harder work, and all the..." Read more
"Shine Shine Shine by Lydia Netzer is a splendidly imaginative novel, but it is disjointed in the plotting, hewing towards the more episodic...." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, finding them interesting and well-written, with one customer noting how the author makes a unique man knowable.
"...Unique story for sure, too long. Interesting, original characters, too much time in their head...." Read more
"...I love it. The characters are fully realized, unusual people, yet like us all in so many fundamental ways...." Read more
"...It's a Pollock painting of a book, a riot of improbable characters and events which occur over a relatively brief period of time which, nevertheless..." Read more
"...Because the story and character development are so amazing, I zoomed through this book, my mind driven to advance into the plot, immersed in the..." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, describing it as brilliantly and quite readable, with one customer noting the breathtaking word choice and imagery.
"...She's very quotable, something like G.K. Chesterton and something like Joss Wheedon and not really like either of them at all...." Read more
"...that held my attention and I did like Sunny quite a bit and Lydia is a good writer but the story rambles on a lot to where those scenes and moments..." Read more
"...Russian Novelist's point of view to her characterizations; they are overwrought and psychopathic...." Read more
"...I think she has a great sensibility and rare literary talent. I think she did her homework. Books, like a tuning fork, should sound a single note...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and worth the read, though some find it ridiculous.
"...Netzer makes each page ... each paragraph ... an exciting read by packing them with delicious (I can't believe I just used that word) phrases...." Read more
"...The writing is beautiful and Netzer handles irony, absurdity, comedy, drama, suburban soul death, and the exhilaration of space travel with an..." Read more
"...It's entertaining but not particularly profound and easily forgotten. The pros first. The author can write...." Read more
"...And the author has a unique voice which I found intriguing and enjoyable, though it's off-putting to readers who prefer a more standard narrative..." Read more
Customers find the book credible and well-developed, featuring strong characters.
"...on in this story with the characters' personal lives which is really well developed and the flashbacks to their childhood together, that you wind up..." Read more
"...Noble Prize winning robotics scientist /astronaut Maxon--is completely credible: his inner life is presented with great capability, and his..." Read more
"...SSS is detailed and precise with lyrical language - no flowery writing here...." Read more
"...Pre-wig at least, she is intelligent and confident; she also has some sort of doctorate...." Read more
Customers appreciate the depth of the book, finding it surprising in detail, with one customer noting its well-told story from an unusual perspective.
"...There were many, many scenes that held my attention and I did like Sunny quite a bit and Lydia is a good writer but the story rambles on a lot to..." Read more
"...In short: Netzer's written a wonderful novel. I think she has a great sensibility and rare literary talent. I think she did her homework...." Read more
"...us the exotic longing for the mundane, a most unusual and inventive source of dramatic (if non-linear) tension...in fact, a real reading pleasure." Read more
"...of Maxon (and I'd argue sunny as well) compelling, but it is purposeful and makes such a unique man knowable...." Read more
Customers find the book empathetic, with one customer noting how basic emotions and actions are recognizable, while another describes it as strangely comforting.
"...beautiful and Netzer handles irony, absurdity, comedy, drama, suburban soul death, and the exhilaration of space travel with an equally sure hand...." Read more
"...woman who is the antithesis of convention, but her basic emotions and actions are recognizable as the universal actions of someone who is trying to..." Read more
"...dialogue is brilliant, self effacing without being maudlin, humorous, tender. She is in a predicament...." Read more
"...characters in recent fiction, but their story is compelling and strangely comforting...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's story, with some finding it compelling and charming, while others note that it rambles and has major plot holes that make it difficult to follow.
"...The writing is beautiful and Netzer handles irony, absurdity, comedy, drama, suburban soul death, and the exhilaration of space travel with an..." Read more
"...Netzer's episodes are so human in content, so rich in image and metaphor, and often so rich in rhythm and pacing that they are both surprising in..." Read more
"...It is a True book, a monster story, a twisted tale of the grotesque masquerading as people because they don't realize that all the other normal..." Read more
"...The actual plot is linear enough, but with deviations that kept me hungry for more. I wanted to both advance and retreat into this story...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 20, 2012This is not the type of book I would normally read. It's not even a book that most people would expect to exist at all. On the map of known literature, it inhabits the dark, murky edges marked "Here There Be Dragons." It's a Pollock painting of a book, a riot of improbable characters and events which occur over a relatively brief period of time which, nevertheless, feels like a lifetime. I can't tell where it begins or ends. I'm not certain exactly what it "means." Are the characters supposed to be metaphors? The likelihood of three (and a half) such improbable people composing one family unit seems so absurd that it must mean something. Robots with emotions building a moon colony? They've got nothing on a completely hairless woman married to the seemingly emotionless man who created them who together were unable to create a child with working emotions.
Did I mention I dislike Pollock's art?
Nevertheless, I love this book. No, that's not the right word. It's not a book I will return to, soon, if at all. It hurt me. It wounded me like Khalil Gibran said in "The Prophet" ... it dug trenches in me that will, some day, allow me to feel greater joy. It is a True book, a monster story, a twisted tale of the grotesque masquerading as people because they don't realize that all the other normal people are just as grotesque.
Writing that paragraph helped me realize what this book is and why I love it. It reminds me of Flannery O'Connor. I remember reading her "Revelations" for the first time. I had two, simultaneous, reactions. The first was, "What the hell was that???" The second was the vertigo associated with falling immediately head-over-heels into love. "Shine, Shine, Shine" was similar, except it was brutal. It waited until I was off my feet, then slammed me into the ground, kicked me in the nads a couple of times, pulled my head up by my hair and made me look at myself and the world.
This book seems an attempt to realize one of my favorite quotes from C.S. Lewis (taken from his "Weight of Glory"):
"It is a serious thing to live in a society of possible gods and goddesses, to remember that the dullest and most uninteresting person you talk to may one day be a creature which, if you saw it now, you would be strongly tempted to worship, or else a horror and a corruption such as you now meet, if at all, only in a nightmare. All day long we are, in some degree, helping each other to one or other of these destinations. It is in the light of these overwhelming possibilities, it is with the awe and the circumspection proper to them, that we should conduct all our dealings with one another, all friendships, all loves, all play, all politics. There are no 'ordinary' people. You have never talked to a mere mortal. Nations, cultures, arts, civilisations -- these are mortal, and their life is to ours as the life of a gnat. But it is immortals whom we joke with, work with, marry, snub and exploit -- immortal horrors or everlasting splendours."
Every other review I've read has more specifics about the story, so I won't bore you with that. Instead, I'll do something I haven't seen. Ms. Netzer makes each page ... each paragraph ... an exciting read by packing them with delicious (I can't believe I just used that word) phrases. She's very quotable, something like G.K. Chesterton and something like Joss Wheedon and not really like either of them at all. I got the impression that Ms. Netzer walks around with a notebook, writing down clever thoughts and phrases to use in novels, like an artist with a sketchbook. Here is a sampling:
- "On the inside of her mother, there was something going on that was death."
- "The baby inside her stretched and turned, uncertain whether it would be autistic or not ..."
- "His voice sounded like a duck's voice, if a duck talked like a robot."
- "When the woman becomes a mother, she can no longer participate in the slow rot."
- "The room sang in harmony with itself."
- "Her veins were cold with love and fear."
- "She would glitter with sacrifice."
- "The wig and the minivan together made an invisibility cloak."
These are all just from the first third of the book. A book that is rife with them, like gems in a labyrinth or those bits of Oreo cookie in Breyers Oreo Cookie Ice Cream ... and not just the black part, the WHOLE cookie with the white stuff, too. It's all good, but you come to one of those babies and bite down and think, "God's Hooks! Now THAT'S what life is all about!"
There is one premise in the book that I, as a SciFi fan, must mention. The main character's husband, Maxon, works on robots. It's hard to quantify the title, because it's AI and design and ... it's too broad to put under a title. His premise is that, because human society functions, for robots to function, they must be like humans. That is, they must have emotions. So, his robots have emotions. It's a brilliant twist on the traditional robot theme. But, most brilliant of all, are Maxon's Three Laws of Robotics (of course). Though his robots feel, they cannot Love, Regret or Forgive. Maxon's definitions for those three emotions are:
- Love = preference without reason
- Regret = doubting rational decisions
- Forgive = trusting data from a previously unreliable source
Oh. Em. Gee. Put so utterly cold and rationally, each sounds like the most completely idiotic of impulses. Yet, they seem eerily close to the cardinal virtues espoused by Christ: Faith, Hope and Love. Of course, Jesus was always doing irrational things, becoming Incarnate, laying down His power, Dying, Resurrecting ... I suppose it's only in character for Him to pick three entirely irrational virtues for His followers to embrace.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 26, 2012As a special education teacher, I think I am drawn to the different. People who are different. My favorite students are my autistic students, I think because so many of them lack that filter that is instilled in us at an early age. They say and do what they feel, when they feel it. So, I was especially drawn to the characters in Shine, Shine, Shine.
When Maxon met Sunny, he was seven years, four months, and eighteen-days old. Or, he was 2693 rotations of the earth old. Maxon was different. Sunny was different. They were different together.
That line pretty much sums up the book. Two wonderfully different people meet and fall in love. Maxon is a genius at robots, not so much so at social interactions. Sunny, different in her own way, helps Maxon with social niceties and raising their autistic son, Bubber.
At his father's funeral, she showed him how to shake hands with the minister, what part of his mouth to show when smiling. Even the first time he told Sunny he loved her, Sunny herself had all but written the words in the air in front of him, and led him to the spot, and pointed to each syllable. And yet, that day, he made up his own words.
I really enjoyed this book. My only complaint is with the ending. I'm not sure if I wanted the book to go on longer, or wrap things up in a different way, but I just felt let down at the end. Still though everything else in the book more than makes up for the slight let down at the end.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2013** spoiler alert ** Hm, I know I'm not the first to say I'm not real sure what to say about this book, nor am I the first to say that it is very unique. And of course, like so many others, that is something I really like about this book.
HOWEVER, the synopsis I originally read did not do me any justice because the book I read didn't follow through as...interesting in terms of pace. Sure the characters are very interesting and I love the overall story of their nerd love. I'm a bit of a nerd myself so I liked her inclusion of equations and descriptions of their "strange" interactions with each other. This book was great in the sense that it highlighted a relationship that you don't see all the time, if ever and is not one you're going to get to see behind the curtain so-to-speak in real life.
That said to say the book is sci-fi, and about astronauts and space is very misleading; this may give the reader the sense that this is really a book about going into space in a more active sense than what really occurs. Maxxon, the husband (who may be autistic), is a genius who goes into space but those scenes are very muted and not very interesting. Instead you end up feeling like the story is more about Sunny and more about their relationship than anything to do with Maxon colonizing the moon using his super robots. It's kind of like those previews you see for movies with a lot of crazy CGI then when you watch the movie you find out that all the good parts were in those previews and there was little more to witness.
To cut my review short I think this book would have been better served being a novella rather than a 336 page novel, although I read the kindle edition. I don't ever consciously quit a book otherwise I would have given up. Reading this for me seemed to take forever and I couldn't wait to stop to be honest. Then when the book did come to an end there was really no conclusion and certainly not a climax. I don't know if she plans a sequel to this but, no offense, I wasn't interested enough to read another installment like this, way too drawn out. There were many, many scenes that held my attention and I did like Sunny quite a bit and Lydia is a good writer but the story rambles on a lot to where those scenes and moments that got my attention quickly get worn out. And this happens a lot. What happened to me as well was that there's so much going on in this story with the characters' personal lives which is really well developed and the flashbacks to their childhood together, that you wind up waiting and waiting to reach a peak or for the story to turn and twist and do something more than just be interesting and unique. You wait for something to happen and it never really does.
So I loved the ingredients of this book but the overall recipe was very watered down without much punch or kick even though we get teased into thinking their will be, even from a romantic sense nothing is delivered. What does Sunny's new baby really look like, is she bald like Sunny? Does Maxxon ever make it home? Is Bubber, their autistic son, better off his medication overall? Does he improve? Now that Sunny has gone on to stop wearing her wig will she stop trying to be the cliche perfect housewife? Will she and Maxon's relationship grow and blossom now? Do these characters grow? What happens with Les Weathers now that we see he was losing his mind a bit? Does Maxon give up his dream to colonize the moon? (I ask these but unless a sequel was written very differently I couldn't bear this again to want to find out, took too long when I have so many other things to do.) The flashbacks are insightful but also drawn out and there isn't really too much extra to gain from them other than the couple's backstory which is well put together, touching, unique.
Sometimes I liked reading this, a lot of times it felt super slow and not worth the time. Unique story for sure, too long. Interesting, original characters, too much time in their head. Great idea, I don't think it was executed as well as it could be. But from a technical stand point it was written pretty good.
Thanks.
eLPy
Top reviews from other countries
- AnneReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 23, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent and thought provoking read
Sunny has an accident in her car and what happens causes her to reconsider a decision that she made some time ago to hide something in her life. Once she has made that decision she realises that she has made many compromises in her life in order to appear "normal" after her unusual upbringing but the things she has done actually threaten to destroy her marriage, her son's life and her own sense of who she is. Gradually she will start to let go of the control she has of the things around her and learn to celebrate her own and others' difference.
This is a book that starts slowly with lots of detail about Sunny's life but you need this to understand what she needs to do in order to make changes. The story also jumps between the present day and Sunny's childhood and the time when she started to hide her own physical issue and to try and change her husband into something more acceptable to what she expects. The story is gloriously life-affirming as Sunny makes changes, sweeps away pretence and starts to live as herself.
This is a great novel in which Sunny's life to some extent mirrors that of every reader - we all try to tidy up our lives, ignore difficult things from the past and to please others although certainly not to the degree that Sunny does. The story is told mostly from Sunny's point of view as she stays at home whilst her husband goes into space with robots, her mother dies while revealing secrets about her past, her new baby comes close to being born, and her child struggles with school. I don't think many of us will face so many different problems at once but we can all understand the way in which Sunny tackles these.
This book does start slowly and strangely includes some mathematical equations (which you only have to observe not understand) but it is definitely worth persevering because the author's way of building the story until you understand what Sunny has done and why is a delight. By the time you have all the story of her childhood you can see why she has hidden her true character and also why she now needs to be free. The book handles some difficult issues about identity, abuse, physical "deformity", the desire for conformity, autism, and difference in an intelligent manner and ultimately gives hope (although not cures).
Excellently written, thought provoking and satisfying
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 23, 2013
4.0 out of 5 stars Modern
Really interesting novel. I read it in one sitting, cried, smiled and remained slightly puzzled. Very powerful and moving story and I am really not sure what happens at the end!
- Janette ChubatyReviewed in Canada on July 29, 2014
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
the more I read, the more I wanted to read!
- J PorteousReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 7, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful, beautiful book
A beautiful book: well-written, unusual. The characters have stayed with me. I can't wait to read more of her work.
Highly recommended.
- Elizabeth A CampbellReviewed in Canada on July 3, 2014
2.0 out of 5 stars Not for me.
Not a fan of the writing style - find it too choppy and can't get on board with any of the characters. Don't know if I'll get through it.