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Reviews for A lot of hot water

 A lot of hot water magazine reviews

The average rating for A lot of hot water based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2016-06-06 00:00:00
1971was given a rating of 5 stars Robin Reichard
Madison Lowery Response #15 Dilly is embodies nearly all of the things we have been saying adolescents don't necessarily have to be. She is MOOOODY, irritable, catty towards her friends, and definitely does NOT want to go with her dad to spend the summer at her dead mother's family's farm. Absolutely not. In fact, Dilly really doesn't want to have anything to do with anything that concerns the woman who passed away from cancer when Dilly was 6, after all, she's the one who died and abandoned her, right? So, when Dilly arrives at the extravagant farm house (as she is forced to do every summer) she finds herself once again surrounded with memories of her mother; memories that only reinforce the imagined woman that Dilly has in her mind: a snobby selfish elitist. When Dilly learns that her mother wrote her a letter while on her deathbed, and she is now meant to receive it since she is now 12, Dilly is furious. She vows to find the hidden letter in the huge farmhouse and destroy it (after all, her mom probably left her dumb advice about makeup and boys anyway, how typical of her). As Dilly works to unearth the letter, she is forced to confront artifacts of her mother, and thus learn the truth about the woman she holds so much disdain for. This beautifully written novel follows Dilly as she is made to come to terms with the fact that the resentment for her mother is just a mask for her sorrow, how the past inevitably repeats itself, and how the love her mother had for the daughter she had to leave behind is nothing like what Dilly could have imagined. This is a very special book to me, and I can't believe I waited this long to actually read it. When I was in elementary school, my mom was struggling through cancer and believed that she would not win the fight. So, she bought all of us (me and my sisters) this book about a Mother leaving behind pieces of herself for her daughter that was recommended to her by one of her nurses, and began to work on goodbye letters for us. I feel insanely lucky that my Mom has now been cancer free for nearly 15 years, and that she never had to finish those letters. She has told me the story inside of this book many times (so maybe this kind of counts as a re-read) but I never actually read the words. Anyway, I love this book. It is not only beautifully written, but it is so complex. It makes me imagine the life I would have had to live without my mother, and I can see where Dilly's anger comes from. The story moves forward with elegance, grace, and understanding. Sure, it is definitely a typical "coming of age" story - and Dilly does have to do the whole adolescent character development thing that we are trying to push against in most texts - but I think it works here. It is a catharsis story in which someone dealing with immense emotional pain comes to terms with the past, and is given peace of mind for the future. Really beautiful. Really moving. Really hard to read (as always for me) without tears. I can't wait to read it again.
Review # 2 was written on 2020-03-22 00:00:00
1971was given a rating of 3 stars Evgeny Kapustin
This book is very touching. It is about a girl who's mother died when she was six. Now she is 12 ad hates her mom for dying on her. Whatever happens, she blames it on her mom. But before she died, she has done two things. First, she gave her farm to Dilly (The motherless girl), which Dilly visits each year. The second, was that she wrote a letter to Dilly before her death. When Dilly's mom's best friend mentions about it to Dilly, Dilly is determined to find it and rip it up. After knowing what Dilly would do to it, Dilly's mother's friend hid it, and it is up to Dilly to find it. Will she? And if she does, what will it say?


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