Emily May's Reviews > The Snow Child

The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey
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really liked it
bookshelves: fairy-tales, 2012


I put off reading The Snow Child because it wasn't something I would have chosen for myself without the extremely positive reviews of other goodreads members. If it is not obvious to you from the description alone, then this book is not mostly plot-driven. It's charm is upheld by the characters, the relationships, and the sad, cold mood that seems to permeate the entire novel from open to close. It is the kind of novel that I sometimes have trouble with, the kind not concerned with action or drama, but more subdued and subtle. However, I was fortunate in that the characters held my attention throughout and the relationship between Mabel and Jack carried something simultaneously heart-warming and bittersweet that really spoke to me.

Mabel and Jack are an aging couple that have escaped from their previous reality into the Alaskan wilderness. They struggle to get by with Jack trying desperately to turn the old farm where they live into something that can support them through the harsh winters. But they are also struggling with something that runs much deeper: their childlessness and the memory of the stillborn baby that continues to drive them apart. I loved the relationship between the pair, the way they often felt distanced from one another but still relied on each other for support. It was heart-breaking to picture them sat at their table feeling the absence of a child and unable to discuss it.

There's something about this novel that is just plain sad. Even when nothing particularly sad seems to be happening. It's a tone that the story never shakes and perhaps it is something to do with the description of the freezing and isolated environment that made me feel like I should prepare to burst into tears at any second. I can't say for sure whether this book was supposed to be a lesson in how you cannot run away from your problems, or how bottling things up and shutting people out never works, but I can say that I took a little bit of all of this from the story.

Onto the snow child herself. It could have been an intentional move on the author's part, but I felt constantly distanced from her character; I felt perhaps she was a tool by which the main players' (Mabel and Jack) could be analysed and allowed to grow and develop. This is not so much a criticism as an observation. If you aren't aware of the basic plot outline, Mabel and Jack create a child out of the snow on a winter's night and discover the creation gone the next morning with a single trail of footsteps leading away from where it had stood. Then suddenly they start to spot a young girl roaming the woods, one who is identical to their snow sculpture and they see it as an opportunity to maybe finally have the child they always wanted.

I had been all set to give this book five stars, I really had. The writing is beautiful, the characters interesting, and the relationships touching... but the ending was disappointing. For me, it seemed like an unsatisfactory "is that it, then?" kind of ending that left me expecting some kind of twist from the epilogue that wasn't forthcoming. It wasn't enough to make me change my mind about the rest of the story and I would still highly recommend this book, but it was quite a large fault in an otherwise near-perfect novel.
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Reading Progress

January 16, 2012 – Shelved
May 12, 2012 – Started Reading
May 13, 2012 –
page 205
48.46%
May 14, 2012 –
page 328
77.54% "Why does everyone always want to hurt the little foxes? :(

"
May 14, 2012 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-50 of 50 (50 new)

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message 1: by Aly (Fantasy4eva) (last edited May 14, 2012 02:07PM) (new) - added it

Aly (Fantasy4eva) i actually had a bit of a problem because i wanted to know the snow child and Garrett more. but always felt at arms length. the ending left me a little confused. i'm still not sure what to make of it. no you're right, it's not plot driven, which is why it waned towards the end at times at felt a little jarring, but overall it touched me so much and had such beautiful moments that the good definitely outweighed the bad.

fab review :)


Kwoomac The ending is why I gave it 4 stars as well. Wonderful review.


Emily May Thank you :)


message 4: by B0nnie (new) - added it

B0nnie I keep running into this book. It sounds really interesting and you've written a great review. Cute foxes too - the little vixens.


message 5: by rameau (new) - added it

rameau A great review, but I'll have to think about reading this one.


Emily May Thanks rameau, I don't think this is one for everyone.


message 7: by jesse (last edited May 22, 2012 08:38AM) (new) - added it

jesse oh no! an unsatisficatory ending? i hate that kind of thing, because that's how i felt about the language of flower (one of my top all-time-fave) :/
The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh


Emily May I know, it's such a shame :( It was just so at odds with the rest of the book.


Alana I agree. Especially to do with the dead drifter in the woods. How does he fit into it all?..


Emily May I agree, Alana. What was the point of even introducing that?


Alana I know, right? It's a shame, cause it's just those little niggly things that stop it from being amazing and make it just good.


message 12: by Tracy (new) - added it

Tracy What a lovely review. I remember this old fairy tale from my childhood. Must read this.


Emily May Thanks Tracy, I hope you like it :)


Trudi Great review Emily! I'm going to have such a hard time reviewing this one. I think I'm just going to say "what she said" :D


Emily May Haha, thanks :)


message 16: by Mia (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mia Hernandez I agree about the ending being why I gave it 4 stars. And I felt very sad too. Just like you said, as if I should cry at any moment.


Karen dead drifter? are you all talking about the man that was referred to as Faina's father?


Emily May Karen wrote: "dead drifter? are you all talking about the man that was referred to as Faina's father?"

Yeah, that's who I meant :)


Karen Ok..thank you. I thought so, but wasn't sure.


Alicia Great review. I, too, agree about the ending


Emily May Thanks Alicia!


message 22: by Jess (new) - added it

Jess A big thanks for that review.


Christy Hagen Clements Yes, I completely agree with you about the ending...although the author did succeed in creating something quite different than what I had concocted in my own head. As Faina was warming up to GarrettI never really suspected a love affair--and given the dust jacket description that what everyone learns about Faina will transform them all-- but rather that she was luring him to fall for her so that she could kill him, like he so mercilessly killed her fox. I took it a step further in that they would also discover that the man believed to be her father, now buried in a shallow grave under the snow, was also her victim. Clearly, I had an entirely different genre in mind for the eventual layout of the story. It might be because I read Stephen King's 11/22/63 prior to this. In any case, my whole point in commenting was to say that I agreed with you about the ending. Sorry for the tangent...lol


message 24: by Jane (new) - rated it 5 stars

Jane I don't agree about the ending....at our book club discussion some tried to speculate what happened to Faina - who she really was and what to make of the ending. I think the beauty of this book is the fact that we can each make of it what we will - decide who Faina was, what she represented, etc. I saw her as an embodiment of Alaska - wild, untamed, pale and beautiful. I didn't find the ending sad - her child was there to bring love and joy to those around him and to share her love of the snow.


Emily May Interesting interpretation, Jane. And a wonderful way of thinking about it. I think it's just my personal preference that I often feel a little cheated by open endings that leave the reader to speculate what really happened. Occasionally I think it works, but the majority of the time I feel like the author has taken the easy way out. But thank you for sharing your thoughts :)


Deborah Yes, I too took a star away because the ending left me empty in a different way than the evocative emptiness of the book's initial landscape. Not in the inevitable conclusion of the story, but in how the author seemed to lose her lyrical touch in how she described it.


Emily May I agree. I think the ending felt somewhat... lost. Like the book had been building up wonderfully to what should have been an amazing conclusion, but it seemed to fade out rather than dazzle in the end.


Jennifer Lane Excellent review. I completely agree with you about adoring the book until the end, when I felt a big let down. And I like what you said about feeling distant from Faina as being a vehicle to understand Jack and Mabel's relationship with her better.


Bumblebee aw seeing so many comments about the ending, contrary to the opinion I loved the ending I wouldn't have it any other way! Because the story is about the Snow Child and what it meant to Mabel and Jack. yes, I craved to know about Garett and Faina but that's not what the story is about, keeping that in mind we still got closure for Garett's character and I couldn't be more satisfied. I might not have explained it well lol


Charlotte | charchar.reads Totally agree with you on the ending!


Marcella Totally agree with you on the ending, except I gave it 3 starts rather than 5 because the ending really left me sort of "empty"....too bad it was such a great read, but fell a bit flat at the end with no twist or new info. I would have taken anything....something on the blue Russian book, something to bring more closure to the story. For a 400 page book I expected a much better ending, but the writing was great and the story flowed nicely.


Margaret Crampton For me the book lost a star because if the ending...How could Faina leave her baby and just evaporate?


message 33: by Sue (new)

Sue Dixon Thank you for your review, I was quite devastated with the ending. If she was not real how could she have had a baby. So she just turns back into snow? Horrible. I did really enjoy everything leading up to that. NEEDED CLOSURE


message 34: by Matt (new)

Matt Hutson After reading the synopsis for this book I almost passed on putting it on my to-read list then I decided to read your review since our tastes are somewhat similar and came to the conclusion that this would be definitely worth reading.

Thanks for writing this review Ms. May :D


Trisha *SPOILER AHEAD*I almost gave it 5 stars but settled on 4.5 as I too felt a little cheated by the ending. I was hoping that Faina was indeed a real person! In my re-imagined ending, Garrett (or Mabel or Jack) would have (some years later) stumbled upon Faina's bones in the forrest, where she had wandered off to die - at last one with the wilderness.


message 36: by Kim (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kim Bayne See I think she knew she was dying and wandered off to die. I think the way it was written was to carry on the theme of her being this being of snow and allude to the fairy tale that Mabel was so invested in.


message 37: by Brenda (new)

Brenda McLean I just finished this book for the second time. The first time I adored the book but hated the ending. All along, the book had such a magical quality to it and in the end, the magic is gone. Faina dies and that’s it? There’s never any signs of her? In the epilogue I was waiting to hear that something magical happened with each first snowfall, something to tell Jack and Mabel that her spirit was still with them. What a let down!

The second time I picked up on a small detail. When Mabel’s sister sent her the fairy tale book, she told Mabel about the Russian fairy tale and that, although the reason changes with different versions, it always ends in the Child melting. In Mabel’s version of the fairy tale, the Snow child “meets a boy and chooses mortal love”. This is what happened to Faina, she chose Garrett and this eventually leads to her death. When they find her empty clothes, it states that her jacket was still buttoned which I think conveys that she melted.

I still wish the book ended more magically, but the second time through, I was more accepting of its ending.


Rachel Ohhhh I LOVED this book! It's one of my all time favorites! I'm so glad you enjoyed it too. It's one I think more people need to know about.


Heidi Grogan I was not disappointed in the ending at all! As Brenda stated above, there was foreshadowing throughout the book on how the story would end. Faina came into Jack and Mabel's lives and changed them both for the better...a beautiful and magical story.


message 40: by Amy (new) - rated it 5 stars

Amy Jo Colbert I agree with you about the ending, I too felt a little let down, I was left needing something more I guess. Maybe it was just because I wasn't ready to say good bye to the story or the characters, or maybe I'm a hopeless romantic, and want a cheerier, happier ending, I just don't know. But I will say this, one of the best books I have ever read, it changed me in certain ways. I came away from this book older, wiser, and still wanting to believe in fairy tales.


Rosie Waters really loved this review - I had the same problem. 5/5 until the last twenty pages or so


Aimee R There is a saying here in Alaska when someone has died, that they have “walked into the forest”. That, combined with the foreshadowing from the fairytale about the ending and Faina choosing to leave her magical snow world to be with her mortal humans and thereby trying to transform from otherworldly child to adult human, all combine into a fitting ending.


Terrie Wiederich I didn't consider it to be an unsatisfactory ending at all. Maybe it's because I'm older see life from a different perspective? I can't say more without revealing to much. I felt that Faina was meant to be somewhat of a mystery even to Jack and Mabel. I wasn't sure the book would be my style and it took me some time to actually begin reading but I'm so glad I did.


Mandy I knew of this book because Eowyn was my neighbor when I lived in Alaska. Initially that was the reason I started reading the book. I finished it because it was so well written and really kept me engaged which is hard to do when you're an adult with a very short attention span when it comes to books!


Cindy Donaldson I agree with you. It was beautifully written and wanted to give it 5 stars, but it seemed like a quick wrap it up ending compared to the first half of the book.


Jaime Absolutely!!! I could not put this one down and was so excited to give it a true 5 stars but, damn, that ending. It was too vague and left us with too many unanswered questions.


Becky Christy Hagen Clements, I wish you had posted "Spoiler Alert" at the beginning of your review. I haven't finished the book yet.


Vanessa Petsuch Perfect review, so detailed and spot 9n!! You verbalized my thoughts so clearly!!


message 49: by Lisa (new) - rated it 4 stars

Lisa Hannon My review would very much match yours especially the ending. Like you…is that it? But I loved the writing. The sense of isolation that must have existed in the setting. I cannot imagine being a homesteader, but people were much tougher in those times. I’m making some assumptions about the ending but they really weren’t confirmed.


Ashley Shea Some spoilers below. I didn't love the story as a whole, the entire thing was more of a 4-star read for me, so I could look at the ending and not be shocked or dismayed by it. There were two separate reminders of Mabel's sister writing to her with the fairytale book saying something like she thought the point was that you could decide your own ending or at least you were in control of how you reacted to it, I think. When I first read the part about Faina disappearing I was like "seriously?! They lose another child?!" But then I realized with the epilogue that the difference this time was how they came out the other side stronger together this time. Particularly with Jack being more accessible to Mabel, and the two of them grieving together instead of separately as they did when they lost their first child. I think, I THINK, although I'm no literary professor, the book was about them, and Faina was just a vehicle for their relationship to heal, which it did... If that's what you want to take from it.


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