Visible Amazement
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- $15.99
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
Meet Roanne Chappell -- definitely not your ordinary teenage girl. A product of the loving but decidedly unorthodox guardianship of her mother, Del, Roanne is a fascinating study in contrasts. Equal parts bold seductress and wide-eyed innocent, smart-ass teenager and wizened sage, she is an outlandish, charismatic, and wholly inspired creation. Unabashedly outspoken (and an increasingly accomplished flirt), Roanne quietly longs for escape -- particularly from her mother's overwhelming and over-powering shadow.
Her chance comes after she discovers, much to her horror, that the professor she had slept with is also bedding her mother. "I just can't seem to stop feeling like one of those air-sucking dogs people leave in cars with the windows open just a tiny bit. I need to put my whole face, my whole self, in the air for a while to try and figure out who I am when I'm not standing next to my amazing mum."
To clear her head, Roanne begins a journey and goes from feeling like an outsider to being embraced by a very special group of people -- people whom most others have found strange or different but with whom Roanne feels right at home. From a marriage proposal by the teenage son of the founders of the Christian Rebirth Center, to her relationship with new best friend Gilbey Tarr -- the sixteen-year-old "Teenage Goddess from Outer Space" -- to a reunion with Dickie Siggins -- international pop star and her mother's life-long friend -- to a bittersweet reconciliation with Del, Roanne soars headfirst into a world of tragedy and comedy, and in the process learns about life, love, and death -- and everything in between.
With this richly satisfying debut novel, Gale Zoë Garnett has channeled Roanne's outsized passions into a tightly crafted and powerfully moving narrative, charting a journey to lands unknown, emotions untapped, and experience unforeseen.
Visible Amazement injects contemporary fiction with welcome jolts of crackling humor and unexpected drama. Written in a totally original and unique voice, the novel, like its heroine, is delightful, disturbing, and utterly unforgettable.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
After she and her beautiful, free-spirited single mother fall for the same man, Roanne Chappell, the feisty 14-year-old narrator of Garnett's exhilarating debut novel, realizes that she needs to leave home for the summer to gain a little breathing space. Heading south from Yachats, Ore., to California, she stops to visit famous cartoonist D.D.A., a kind, gay French-Canadian dwarf she looks to as a mentor. This first destination is unusual enough, but Roanne's travels take her to increasingly strange places, from the surreal home of her troubled friend Gabe, the son of two washed-up western stars-turned-evangelists, to beautiful, cold Malibu Colony, home of the cartoonist's gigantic and brooding brother Pascal, a talented photographer, and Gilbey Tarr, a gorgeous, openhearted, alcoholic 16-year-old nouveau riche heiress soon to become Roanne's best friend. Roanne's hunger-- her sheer adolescent greed--for life and love and connection and experience bring her some wonderful memories and relationships, but also a share of grown-up pain. Some readers may be taken aback by the frank discussion of her precocious relationships with a number of older men and her over-the-top adventures, but her character's sheer energy and intelligence make a little open-mindedness and suspension of disbelief worthwhile. The novel is told in the first person, in Roanne's own dialect, a wonderful combination of Canadian vernacular and resonant polysyllabics. At the close of this cunningly styled tale, a series of tragic happenings leaves Garnett's charming heroine--and the reader--with the bittersweet taste of life lessons honestly learned.