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Hardcover Dreams of Gold Book

ISBN: 044652445X

ISBN13: 9780446524452

Dreams of Gold

Emotionally devastated by the loss of her partner's skating career due to a car accident, Maggie Carothers learns what ultimately matters most in art, in life, and in love. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Temporarily Unavailable

We receive 1 copy every 6 months.

Related Subjects

Fiction Literature & Fiction

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A sports novel and romance all wrapped up into one book

I personally thought this book was very good. At the beginning, it was somewhat boring, but it instantly became magnificent. However, it was somewhat confusing because it went back and forth between settings, so I had to go back and check it. But, the relationship between maggie and hiro was VERY interesting...friends at first, lovers after that. And, the strive to become an Olympic Gold medalist was exhilarating.

Gold Medal Pulp Fiction

A delightful bit of escapism, "Dreams of Gold" might have been the result of a collaboration between Sidney Sheldon and James Clavell. The book's insights into the world of figure skating and life in contemporary Japan are fascinating, and the book is peopled with wonderful characters, although not in a roman a clef style. ( It would have been even more fun if real figures had been worked into the narrative.) "Dreams of Gold" isn't great literature, but it is a great escape. Its plots and subplots all tie up nicely, and I read into the night to see who was going to win the gold medal. It's frothy and fun. As a gay man, however, I did wish the gay characters weren't so swarmy, manipulative, and evil.

I can't believe a man wrote it!

Maggie Campbell, the leading character in Dreams Of Gold, is a gem. She's smart (she's a sophomore at Harvard when the story opens), she's emotionally and physically strong, and she gives 100% in everything she does. This has made her one of the world's best figure skaters, and enabled her to overcome a devastating blow in her past, but it also means she commits totally to a relationship that the reader can see is a disaster waiting to happen (the author skillfully lets the reader in on things Maggie doesn't know). I found myself thinking, as I watched the spoiled, manipulative Clay using Maggie: "Maggie, Maggie, don't fall for that line!" Then I'd remember the times I'd made the mistake of falling for a charming, good-looking, self-absorbed, manchild's lies--and what woman hasn't?I love skating, and this book will satisfy the most rabid fan, with a look inside world-class figure skating that feels 100% authentic. But while Maggie is very much part of this world, she's the wonderful character she is because she's also much more than that world. Maggie on the ice is a joy to "watch," but it was Maggie off the ice who kept me turning the pages.As I read the book, I kept wondering: "How can a man know that a woman would think that way? The author gets Maggie so right, not only Maggie the young woman but Maggie as a young girl, and at every stage in between! I also admired the authenticity with which he draws Japan, and the Japanese, where I lived for several years. I felt I'd gone back! We see inside the corporate suites of the great Japanese companies, we learn what it's like to grow up in Japan, and we get intimate views of the Japanese underworld and the Burukumin, the Japanese "untouchable." Mr. Thomson obviously knows Japan, and has great fondness for it, but refuses to be blind to its flaws. All the characters--American and Japanese--are skillfuly drawn, many are engaging and two, Hiro Araki and the formidable skating instructor, Madam Goto, are complex, multi-dimensional figures I couldn't get enough of. And Maggie Campbell--well, if I could have an older sister...This is one beach book I won't mind re-reading!

So much more than "a skating novel"!

I read Dreams Of Gold on a friend's recommendation. I wasn't sure I wanted to--I love watcing Olympic-level figure skating, but could it sustain a worthwhile novel?I needn't have worried--Dreams is as much about culture conflicts--much of the story is set in Japan, and the scenes and people are rendered so skillfully that I feel as though I just returned from Japan--as it is about skating, though I certainly have a far better appreciation of what goes into producing a world class skater than I did.Dream is also, and ultimately, about love. If you've ever wondered whether you're making a mistake about someone you think you love--and who hasn't--you'll identify with feisty, competitive Maggie Campbell, Dreams' delightful heroine.A terrific read!

Exciting,well written about skating and truimph over pain

In Dreams of Gold, Thomson tells the story of a redheaded half Japanese figure skater,who dreams of the 2002 Olympics.Maggie is smart, determined but like most of us, encounters roadblocks on her journey.How she handles these hardships is told with,compassion,wit and style. One not only encounters an attractive,human heroine but learns much about the cultures of figure skating and Japan. I have become a Thomson fan.His metaphors and similes are graphic and most clever.
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