When Cat is fifteen, her life changes dramatically. Instead of a private school and a wealthy background, her father walks out and her mother picks up Cat and her brother and move them to rural Michigan. Once there, Cat undergoes a dramatic change.
She has always been the good girl and decides to be a different girl. Much of this is because she meets the next door neighbor, Marlena. Marlena is the daughter of a drug dealer. She is addicted to pills and alcohol and sleeps with whomever she wants. She rarely attends school and basically does whatever strikes her to do. Cat has never known anyone like Marlena and she decides to be like her and her circle of friends.
Cat starts drinking and picks up an addiction she is still fighting in her thirties when married and living in New York. Marlena never makes it out of Michigan as she drowns one night while high in a few inches of water. Was it an accident or murder? Cat doesn't know but the question and what more she might have done for Marlena haunts her life as she tries to move forward.
Julie Buntin is writing about a life she knows. This is her debut novel but she grew up in the same environment in northern Michigan and now lives in New York. The book was longlisted for various prizes and named a best book of the year by publications such as Kirkus, Huffington and the Washington Post. It is a novel of struggle as a teenager has the rug pulled from under her feet and has to reinvent herself. Marlena is the first person she meets and she falls into her orbit. Parents will not be thrilled to read about how impressionable teenagers are and the lengths they will go to in order to fit in. This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.
No comments:
Post a Comment