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A Novel

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
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فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2019

نویسنده

Susan Steinberg

ناشر

Graywolf Press

شابک

9781555978914
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from June 17, 2019
This singular first novel from Steinberg (Spectacle) has the elements of crime fiction: a seaside setting with a dark underbelly, a family torn apart by infidelity, the tragic death of a beautiful young girl. But Steinberg makes the familiar story new, in part, by deconstructing her elements: “I’ll say the setting is the boathouse; the setting is a washroom; the setting: night and summer.” The book begins with an unnamed narrator, the rebellious young daughter of a successful businessman, standing near the water at the shore: “we all knew of the girl who drowned,” she relates, “she sank like a stone, they said; she was showing off that night, they said; the guys all said.” Though the girl’s death has little direct bearing on the narrator’s main story, it’s emblematic of the uneasy tone Steinberg establishes and becomes a dark motif for the events that follow. With the summer drawing to a close, the narrator recounts her wild vacation: the tenuous connection she had to the dead girl, desires she doesn’t understand, her disturbed brother’s increasingly reckless behavior, her father’s flagrant affair and insistence that she keep it a secret, her rage at the other woman, building finally to her family coming apart. What makes this tale so thrilling is Steinberg’s artistry with form; she fractures narrative into its fundamental parts. Steinberg writes prose with a poet’s sense of meter and line, and a velocity recalling the novels of Joan Didion. The result is a dizzying work that perfectly evokes the feeling of spinning out of control.



Kirkus

June 15, 2019
Teenagers spend a hazy summer at the shore. One girl comes to terms with both her emerging independence and the mysterious death of a girl just like her. Steinberg (Spectacle, 2013) writes in small, interconnected, and poetic fragments. She follows one unnamed teenager through a summer of partying that results in the drowning death of another local girl under mysterious circumstances. This is "a story about salvation," she says, "but that doesn't mean this girl was saved; and it doesn't mean that we were saved; or that anyone was, or ever would be; it only means that something, in this moment, needed saving." Through Steinberg's poetic prose and chapters that braid together different timelines from the same summer, we come to learn of the girl's feelings of guilt about her friend's death. The same summer, the girl discovers her parents' shortcomings and begins to fight against the stereotype of the drunken party girl that she sometimes embraces. Steinberg's observations of the delicate workings of interpersonal relationships are astute. Her protagonist says, "What I mean is, girls, there is no love the way you think of love." Love is the mysterious promise that hangs over all the sexual encounters at the shore; adults and teens alike allow the promise of love to draw them away from sensible behavior. Through her reflections on the night of the drowning and her conversations with her family following a shocking discovery about her father, the girl is both discovering her power and the gendered expectations that cage it. She begins to find her own voice, and she questions the culture that allowed her friend to drown--even though she is a complicit participant in that culture. "And that's what happens when you drink," she tells us, parroting the town's gossip. "And that's what happens when you fool around." Heartbreaking, eerie, and acutely observant.

COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



Booklist

July 1, 2019
In this hypnotic story that could be described as a noir Gossip Girl novel written in verse, Steinberg introduces readers to a community of teens more jaded than those of E. Lockhart's We Were Liars (2014), and with more secrets than those of Nicholas Sparks' A Walk to Remember (1999). The unnamed protagonist is a fierce and frustrated teenage girl, who relishes time spent underneath her older brother's hot friends, and hot nights on the boardwalk with a pill dissolved in her soda. She and her comrades harbor a dangerous truth: what happened to the beautiful girl who drowned that night at the Jetty. Someone knows; everyone knows; it's unclear who knows. The protagonist suspects her brother could be involved, based on his recently misfiring synapses and frequent misbehavior, but she barely has time to entertain the possibility, as she's too busy uncovering her powerful father's infidelities. With simple, lyrical language, Steinberg presents a mystery of privilege and youth that deftly captures the unadulterated fear quaking deep behind a teenager's invincible front.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)




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