Robi's Flying Saucer Drive-In
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
Saffron is a fourteen year old girl living in Antoninio.
In fact, Saffron is quite a normal girl, but her name evokes a promise, a peculiarity, an instant sympathy. She is smart, funny and whimsical.
'When I worked at Robi's I must have had the metabolism of rabbit – a skinny rabbit, not one of those overfed ones – because I ate a lot of fried foods and never topped one hundred and twenty pounds. Maybe it was all that running around. It could have just been hormones.'
Her life is not very adventurous, but one day her parents buy a diner. She starts working there to save money. For she has a dream. There is this new and enigmatic girl Clair in her class. Clair could be seen as the personalization of what life has in store for Saffron. Maybe.
Customer Reviews
Robi’s Flying Saucer Drive-In
Kelly Winsa 'Robi’s Flying Saucer Drive-In' a novel
A review
Reading a book about an adolescent or teenager does not mean it is a book for young adults. Why are there so little novels with young people as the main charactar? Why is it that almost always we are invited to enter the inner world of adults, to follow their adventures?
In fact it is the world of young people that shows how strange and wonderful life itself is! They are unhindered by the strict rules of grown ups. Yes, they have their rules too, but they are a bit wonky, idiosyncratic, sometimes outrageous or silly. Still they form the moral and social compasses that they live by in those years. And since we all have been young adults, we recognise their inner worlds. They remind us who we were once, how unstable and exciting life was, how full of promises, failures and disappointments. And so is the world of our protagonist Saffron, a fourteen year old girl living in Antoninio.
What kind of names are those? No, she is not the daughter of hippies or pop stars, her parents are quite normal academics. In fact Saffron is quite a normal girl, but her name evokes a promiss, a peculiarity, an instant sympathy. She is smart, funny and whimsical. As a reader I smiled a lot while reading, laughed out loud even.
When I worked at Robi’s I must have had the metabolism of a rabbit—a skinny rabbit, not one of those overfed ones—because I ate a lot of fried foods and never topped one hundred and twenty pounds. Maybe it was all that running around. It could have just been hormones.
Antoninio can not be found on Google Maps, but it is where Saffron lives. Fiction and reality at the same time, for we can imagine cities or towns with a name like that. In fact the book has a clear cinematographic quality. It brings Juno in mind, the 2007 movie from director Jason Reitman and writer Diablo Cody.
Her life is not very adventurous, but one day her parents bought a diner. She starts working there to save money. For she has a dream. She wants to go to France, to visit Paris and experience a different life. And there is this new and enigmatic girl Clair in her class. She feels drawn to her, and though Claire comes to live in the basement with Saffrons family, she stays a bit mysterious. Claire could be seen as the personalization of what life may have in stall for Saffron. Maybe.
Kelly Winsa wrote a sensitive and lively novel, in which we dwell in Saffrons world for a while. There is a kind of naturalness in her writing, as life it self is. Things come and go, as even the most strange things come and go. In her short and happy life little sparkles of angst and sadness can be felt too. Reading the dialogues is like being present in the room, or, again, seeing a movie:
“Can’t you stop that?”
“Stop what?” Fred said, his mouth open.
“Close your mouth. I am not interested in seeing what chewed food looks like!”
“Oh.” Fred looked hurt.
“Sorry. Just in case you want a girlfriend.”
The book invites you to see life as it is. There is something of Salingers The Catcher in the Rye in it, or The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 ¾ by British author Sue Townsend. Townsend wrote a series of ten diaries no less, ending by Adrian Mole: the Prostrate Years.
Winsa's novel has its own sphere and language, as girls bring a different 'atmosphere', different codes and words. I would happily read more about this girl Saffron, turning into a young woman. Will she be going back to Paris, after her first maiden trip as a schoolgirl? Go, Girl, go!
Margriet Kemper, artist and writer
The Netherlands, june 2022