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Reviews for Small Wonder

 Small Wonder magazine reviews

The average rating for Small Wonder based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2019-05-29 00:00:00
2003was given a rating of 4 stars Renson De Castro
Small Wonder published in 2005 when the wounds of 9/11 were still fresh and forefront in our minds. In the wake of the tragedy, Kingsolver analyzes as best one can why those in power think that the solution to world problems is to kill each other and why it is that America is so hated by other countries. Ours may not have been exactly the most generous or friendly country, or ecologically-minded in 2005, and this concerns her greatly, as it does I. Now, though, taken in the perspective of today's world, Kingsolver must be absolutely apoplectic, as am I. A socially responsible environmental defender, who so happens to love this country and hopes for a better world. She also loves her daughters and the art of writing, both covered in the essays, among other topics. Her narration of her own stories is rather comforting to the ears even when the subject matter is not. She has an interesting accent having grown up in KY but appears to have lost most (but definitely not all) of it through her many relocations throughout her life.
Review # 2 was written on 2009-01-01 00:00:00
2003was given a rating of 4 stars Gary Gunkel
4.5 stars I was inclined to think I would like Kingsolver's fiction much better than her essays. Happily, I was wrong. This is a collection of beautifully written essays covering everything from raising chickens to raising children, from global war to birdwatching. There are so many perfectly expressed ideas and sentiments in these essays that I know I'll be reading it again. I laughed with her as she shared her young daughter's pronouncements, cried with her as she briefly shared her rape experience at age nineteen, and continually marveled at her ongoing hopefulness and idealism about the future of the world in general. I've very much enjoyed most of her novels, and now with these essays I've gained a great new respect for her as a person and a writer. Her husband is an ornithologist, and there are some wonderful pieces the two of them wrote together about their birding experiences south of the border and closer to their own backyard. Nature-loving bird freak that I am, I really got into these essays. I grew up without television and long ago chose to continue living without it, so the essay about why she keeps "the one-eyed monster" out of her home had special resonance for me. She articulated so well all the things I think and feel about the topic and am not able to put clearly into words. I feel like making photocopies for all my friends so we can understand each other about this. Much food for thought and warmth and humor in this collection.


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