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lilibetbombshell 's review for:
The Fortune Seller
by Rachel Kapelke-Dale
dark
emotional
mysterious
reflective
sad
tense
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
Plot
Strong character development:
Complicated
Loveable characters:
Complicated
Diverse cast of characters:
No
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Complicated
Women’s fiction is one of those genres I’m picky about reading. Most of the time it doesn’t appeal to me; However, when Rachel Kapelke-Dale writes it I’m guaranteed to read it. I’ve been a fan since The Ballerinas. In my opinion, The Fortune Seller is her best book yet.
In The Fortune Seller we go back to the familiar ground of important female friendships, like in The Ballerinas. Those important friendships had been formed in youth, while these were formed at Yale. As in The Ballerinas, these ties of friendship are also based on an expensive and focused talent: EQ, or equitation. They are all equitation riders for Yale University and everyone knows horse girls are a special breed of girl.
But there are horse girls and there are girls who have horses. Our protagonist, Rosie, is a horse girl. Born in Illinois to veterinarian parents and brought up on 4-H and helping hands from charities who help kids get into horse riding, Rosie is talented enough to get onto Yale’s team but not rich enough to ever go pro. Her three friends are all girls with horses. And then there’s Annelise. Annelise rides like a horse girl, swans about like a girl with horses, but what is she really?
This book is predictable, yes, but I have gotten used to putting that out of the way because I’d never enjoy a book again if I let that get to me at this point. So, putting that aside, this book is fabulous. As always, Kapelke-Dale writes female friendships so well. The complexity, vulnerability, wickedness, beauty, tragedy, and the seeming obliviousness of it all. How it seems like we think we know our friends so well when we don’t know them at all. How female friendships, especially at college-age, can turn on a dime. How vicious we can be.
The story is great because it’s about self-fulling prophecies and the little lies we need to tell ourselves to get through the day that end up leading to larger lies that have the potential to rule us. It’s about complacency in our lives and our silence. It’s a terrific read for sure.
I was provided a copy of this title by NetGalley and the author. All thoughts, opinions, views, and ideas expressed herein are mine and mine alone. Thank you.