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Fiction. Literature. Mystery. Thriller. HTML:The basis for the Emmy-nominated "instantly gripping" (Washington Post) anthology series on USA starring Jessica Biel, The Sinner is an internationally bestselling psychological thriller surrounding an unexplained murdert On a sunny summer afternoon by the lake, Cora Bender stabs a complete stranger to death. Why? What would cause this quiet, kind young mother to commit such a startling act of violence in front of her family and friends? Cora quickly confesses and it seems like an open-and-shut case. But the police commissioner, haunted by these unaswered questions, refuses to close the file and begins his own maverick investigation. So begins the slow unraveling of Coraâ??s past, a harrowing descent into the depths of her own psyche and the violent secrets buried within. The Sinner is a dark, spell spellbinding novel, where the truth is to be questioned at every turn. â??As I read [the novel], I kept going, â??I know where this is goingâ??thereâ??s no way this could be interesting.â?? And then it would just take a comÂpletely different direction.â?ť â??Jessica Biel â??The Sinner is unnerving and weird and guaranteed to stick with you weeks later.â?ť â??Sarah Weinman, editor of Troubled Daughters, Twisted Wives and Women Crime Writers â??Hauntingly insightful and sen… (more)
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On a sunny summer afternoon by the lake, Cora Bender stabs a complete stranger to death. Why? What would cause this quiet, kind young mother to commit such a startling act of violence in front of her family and friends?
Cora quickly confesses and it seems like an open-and-shut case. But the police commissioner, haunted by these unaswered questions, refuses to close the file and begins his own maverick investigation. So begins the slow unraveling of Cora’s past, a harrowing descent into the depths of her own psyche and the violent secrets buried within. The Sinner is a dark, spell spellbinding novel, where the truth is to be questioned at every turn.
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The narration in this book was all over the place. You had numerous flashbacks told in Cora's first perspective. Then you had the present tense which is was told by Cora in the third person, followed by the chief also in the third person, and the aunt in the third person. It took like five minutes to figure out whether I was in the present or the past and to figure out who the hell was narrating which part. It was way too much work for something that's supposed to be entertaining.
The other problem I had with The Sinner was that it was a bloated book. The author seriously could've done with cutting out at least a hundred pages that had nothing to do with anything. For example, I really could care less about the chief's daughter and wife...or their insignificant opinions. His side plot was so boring and extremely unnecessary. It's all fine and dandy to hear his side of the story since he's the one trying to help Cora. But what the hell does his daughter or his wife have to do with anything? They don't. That and numerous other things had me bored for a while.
Did I want to know happened in Cora's past? Yes. I was intrigued. However, I went through a point where I just really wanted to finish the book and debated on whether or not I should just put myself out of this misery and just read the last page. Again, I didn't expect the twist to be what it was, but by the time I actually got there, I was so frustrated that I really could care less how twisted it was and was just happy that I would be able to put this book down.
So, I don't recommend The Sinner. I don't know if my reaction to this is due to the author or to the author's translator, but the fact remains that this book had an intriguing premise, but the payoff wasn't enough to slog through 300 pages of twisted games (and not in the good way), confusing narration, and boring side plots.
It's partially Grovian's investigation into Bender's childhood and family life, and partially his patient and careful questioning of her that slowly draws out the truth. Bender's childhood is the stuff of nightmares - a desperately ill younger sister and a fanatical religious zealot of a mother who never hesitated to blame her first-born daughter for all of the younger sister's medical problems. Add a caring but sexually frustrated and ineffectual father, who whilst never sexually abusing his daughter, confronted her with her parent's sexual problems, and everything has combined to create a girl who is guilty, conflicted, and profoundly disturbed. Her closeness with her father creates a complex relationship with him, whilst he is kind and caring towards his daughter, his failure to take firm action in the face of her mother Elsbeth's more extreme behaviour makes him a weak figure, difficult to maintain respect, love and affection for. Bender's ill sister, Magdalena, should have died many times in her childhood, somehow managing to cling to life, she is the centre of her mother's world, swamping everything and everyone with her requirements, draining the families financial as well as emotional resources, isolating them. Eventually the two sisters seem to work out an understanding, a relationship, even love for each other, although, as with everything in this family, there's something not quite right.
Because of the way that Grovian goes about drawing out the story of Bender's background and therefore her reasons for violently killing a complete stranger, there's a lot of ground gone back over. As she constantly lies about her past, Grovian is forced to look for the sprinklings of truth within the lies and slowly and steadily disprove the lies, forcing Bender back and back over the same ground, coaxing the truth from the ultimate in unreliable narrators. Because of that narrative device, the pace is slow, emotional, repetitive and intricate. The reader is given every opportunity to share Grovian's frustration, but at the same time you also get a feeling for Bender's distress, her desperation. Whatever it is that she doesn't want known is held close, she's desperate to obfuscate, confuse, deny, avoid. Particularly interesting was the way that Bender's family members, in particular, are characterised. Seen, as they are, mostly from Bender's point of view, there's something misty about them, hesitantly revealing her father's ineffectiveness, her mother's madness, and her sister's memory. It's particularly interesting that Magdalena is both transparent, weak, seemingly just about incapable of even basic communication; yet she's ultimately revealed as a much stronger personality, capable of manipulation, more able than originally contemplated. Remembering that we were viewing Bender's family from her perspective, and the role that Magdalena's entire existence had such a profound affect on Bender - made it a particularly thought-provoking aspect.
THE SINNER isn't a straight-forward book. Part thriller, a most unusual psychological study, it wasn't an easy book to read but it was an extremely thought-provoking, worthwhile book to read.
Cora has decided that this is the last day she's going to live. She has planned everything. She'll get an 'accident' while swimming. However, things turn out differently. She stabs a man to death. Why?
I found this to be a very interesting whydonit. The story was very interesting and
I, like many others, was pulled in by the trailer for the USA mini-series starring Jessica Biel. I figured the book had to be good to have been made into a TV series. But it really dragged for me and I can’t count the times that I thought of putting the book down for good. But something kept making me pick it up.
This is yet another unreliable narrator book. Sometimes Cora admits to the reader that she’s lying but sometimes she’s not even sure if she’s lying. So it’s a bit hard to follow what’s happening. Events are gone over again and again, each time a little bit differently. The book has its merits as the story is quite unique and I didn’t see the reveal coming. I’ve recorded the TV series and will probably watch it even though I now know what’s going to happen. Not sorry I read it but I really didn’t find it as gripping as described.
The book has an interesting "reveal" at the end but it takes so long to get to that point that the whole experience is borderline boring...the events of a single night and another day are rehashed and recounted in so many different ways as different investigators give develop their own theories, that the reader is often tempted to chuck the whole thing.
I'm rating this one a 3-star book because the essential plot is a good one...the execution of that plot, not so much.
This is an intricately-plotted novel that rewards by making a deep incision almost immediately, then slowly, delicately peeling back the layers to get to the heart of the crime.
I won't say more about the story than that,
Really good read.
That's the plot. The Sinner is also about religion, family, and sex, in the most shattering of ways. In the past, Cora's mother is revealed to be almost psychopathic in her Catholic fervour, blaming Cora for her younger sister's failing health. As a relief from Cora's tortured childhood and disastrous present, there are perspective chapters for the chief, allowing the reader to understand that his motivations go beyond a desire to lock up a criminal. The crime itself is straight forward, but the connection the victim has to Cora's past is murky and confused.
The narrative switches between Cora's past and present, at times even merging, her mental state deteriorating the closer inspector Grovian gets to the truth. The prose is simple, almost stark at times, but occasionally veers towards confusing, giving the reader a glimpse into Cora's state of mind and her inability to properly process her past.
And Cora's past is truly horrific: her mother's religious mania, her sister's illness, and her father's frustrations all converged on Cora, forcing her to shoulder their burdens, twisting her mind unnaturally. The tragedy is not the violent death of the victim but Cora's entire life. As the reader you're drawn into it, frustrated by her family's endless selfishness.
The Sinner is a solid sort of mystery, a compulsive read to be sure, though I'm not sure that I would quite classify it as great.