Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Crane Husband
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
23 posts | 20 read | 14 to read
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
llwheeler
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image

#bookreport and #weeklyforecast can both be summed up with: more Nebula reading!

I finished the novelettes and one novella, Mammoth at the Gates, and I'm about 40% into both another novella and one of the novels. This week I want to finish the novellas and the novel I've started, and at least start another, ideally finish it too. But we'll see.

20 likes1 stack add
review
BookBr
Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
Pickpick

This was a strange and haunted and mesmerizing story. I have that hollow feeling, like I‘m still inhabiting its world, although time has passed since I finished it. It‘s was bloody and angry, gentle and beautiful, harsh and unforgiving, all at once. Loss ran as an undercurrent, with the struggle to stay alive pulling in the other direction. I know it will sit with me for a long time.

blurb
BookBr
Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image

Picking up a short read for a blustery Saturday — perfect for curling up with a book! I seem to be leaning toward creepy fairy tales these days…

review
Bookish_Gal
Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
Pickpick

TW: domestic abuse. Child neglect & abuse
Barnhill has an incredible way with words. This is a feat here, with so many few words she conveys a young teens pain at being left to care for her brother alone after the father dies. Mother neglects them for a new all consuming “love”. Heartbreaking more than uplifting. Anger more than happy. So much going on so that the family that needs her stays together. Didn‘t sit right, but maybe that was the point

7 likes1 stack add
quote
RowReads1
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill

“In Ireland,” he continued, “the goddess Brigantia sat at her loom and wove the whole land into being, stitch by beautiful stitch. And broken stitch.” Another cough. “In China, the goddess Zhinu stitched each of the stars into the heavens, and wove the silver river streaking across the sky. In ancient Egypt, the goddess Neith wove two kingdoms together, and the Vikings sang sagas about the valkyries who wove on looms fitted with severed heads for

RowReads1 weights and used arrows to pull the thread from end to terrible end. Weavers could tell your fortune or remove enchantments or change your fate. You could weave a happy marriage, a healthy family, a doomed generation, an unraveling birthright. You never want to make a weaver angry, I‘ll tell you that much.” 8mo
28 likes1 comment
blurb
Kristelh
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
TheAromaofBooks Yay!! Looking fabulous!!! 8mo
4 likes1 stack add1 comment
quote
RowReads1
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill

“I had nightmares after that. I dreamed of my mother standing in the endless fields beyond our yard, where no one was allowed to go, wings erupted from her bloody back, feathers piercing and rustling their way out of her skin, her beaking mouth open in a scream at first, then a sigh, then a bright keen as she lifted skyward and flew away. My father died a month later. And I was terrified of being alone. “

blurb
RowReads1
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
quote
RowReads1
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill

“and even though I knew enough about birds to know that they‘re not much for facial expressions, there was no mistaking the bird‘s randy, jubilant smirk. He puffed his feathers and preened. I slurped down my soup and excused myself from the table, saying I had homework to do- which was true, but I had no intention of actually doing it. He won‘t last. I told myself. Of course he won‘t. My mother wasn‘t one to keep anything around, save for me and

RowReads1 Michael. So I wasn‘t particularly worried about the crane. I should have been worried about the crane.” 9mo
25 likes1 comment
review
mandarchy
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
Pickpick

I thought this had an underlying theme that matched When Women Were Dragons. It was less complex, but the weaving reminded me of the knots, not to mention the transformations. The farm seemed futuristic and contemporary at the same time, and that gave me the creeps. I wasn't expecting it to be so short.

review
LiterallyLiterary
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
Pickpick

TW: domestic abuse, physical abuse, child abuse, neglect

This story brought me to tears. It devastated me. I don‘t think I could bear reading it again. But the story itself is written beautifully. The main character has suspicions of the crane that her mother brings home. But his appearance brings uncertainty, misery, and love.

#family #abuse #magic #twistedlove

review
AllisonM89
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
Pickpick

A must read. Tragic. Magnificently written. Will definitely be seeking out other books by Barnhill.

June #bookspin @thearomaofbooks

TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! 11mo
10 likes1 comment
review
BookishTrish
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
Pickpick

I think novellas are super tricky to do well; this one was excellent.

BarbaraBB Will you be reading and discussing Yellowface with us first half of July in #Camplitsy23? 11mo
67 likes1 comment
review
GerardtheBookworm
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
Pickpick

Kelly Barnhill follows up When Women Were Dragons with another female driven story of domestic abuse and symbolic messages. A mother meets a man who appears like a beautiful crane but disguises something evil underneath. Only her eldest child sees through the facade and is determined not to be manipulated as magical realism and metaphorical imagery tells a story of family dysfunction, denial and manipulation.

14 likes2 stack adds
review
Tamra
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
Pickpick

This book is a great example why I love novellas. ♥️

Economy of writing means each word is thoughtfully chosen, there are no meaningless plot diversions, it strongly imprints a snapshot of the MC, and it leaves the reader with ideas to think about long after turning the final page.

If I find this in print, I‘m going to add it to my shelves. It‘s worth a second read.

P.S. We in northern climes dream of days like this 10 months out a year. 🌞

jlhammar Sounds excellent. Looks like a glorious morning! 11mo
Christine Wonderful review! Loved this book. ❤️ 11mo
ShelleyBooksie Lovely pic. Love the owl!!! 11mo
69 likes1 stack add3 comments
quote
Tamra
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image

Ooofta! The first chapter had me hooked - ominous & foreboding. 🥺

review
Christine
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
Pickpick

I thought this was an excellent novella and am increasingly becoming a big Kelly Barnhill fan. This was really great at a sentence level and full of things I enjoyed - rural Midwest setting; bits of sci-fi-ish technology; a smart, empathetic, and gutsy young heroine; and lots of humor poking through the deep darkness.

43 likes2 stack adds
review
Erinreadsthebooks
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
Pickpick

An interesting, well-written, weird, and sad little book 📕 Good stuff!

35 likes1 stack add
review
eol
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
Pickpick

I love fairytales. What I sometimes don‘t love as much is retellings—same-old, same-old, reheated over and over—unless the take is truly fresh. And it is fresh, this time. A magical realism horror story from the point of view of a teenager grasping at straws to keep her family together. It portrays the dynamic inside a dysfunctional, abusive household, throwing in some extra magic to make the things both more—and, in a way, less—scary.

4.5/5

blurb
Branwen
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image

Kelly Barnhill is quickly becoming a favorite author for me! This feminist, brutal, and brilliant retelling of the Japanese story will stay with me for quite a while. I only wish it had been longer! It's waaaaay too short! 😭

47 likes2 stack adds
review
Mpcacher
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
Pickpick

I was not familiar with the Japanese folktale 'The Crane Wife' before reading this modern retelling, but it did not affect my enjoyment of this wonderful fantasy novella. It features a teenage girl who is determined to protect her young brother from the neglect and abuse that occurs in her house, especially after her mom brings home a six foot crane as her lover. It was an easy read and will have me thinking about the tale for a long while. 4/5 !

review
Rehesina
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image
Pickpick

So so good! It‘s an amazing piece of fiction!

23 likes3 stack adds
blurb
mandarchy
The Crane Husband | Kelly Barnhill
post image

Cover reveal for upcoming book by Barnhill.

TheKidUpstairs Gorgeous 2y
36 likes1 comment