![Split Just Right](/assets/artwork/1x1-42817eea7ade52607a760cbee00d1495.gif)
![Split Just Right](/assets/artwork/1x1-42817eea7ade52607a760cbee00d1495.gif)
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Split Just Right
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- £4.99
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- £4.99
Publisher Description
Danny lives in her mother’s world of make-believe, but all she wants is the truth
Dandelion Finzimer’s mother has always wanted to get her daughter on the stage. Mrs. Finzimer is an actress—aspiring, anyway—who makes a living teaching and doing commercials, but lives for the applause she earns as a member of the Bellmont Players. Danny has no talent for acting—she couldn’t even play Helen Keller in The Miracle Worker—but whether she realizes it or not, she’s part of a play. Because no matter how tough things get, Danny’s mom is always acting happy, telling subtly shifting stories, and doing her best to put a smile on her daughter’s face. This used to be OK, but Danny is in ninth grade now, and high school is a time to face the truth. She has questions about her father, who left when she was a baby, and her paternal grandparents, who live less than an hour away. Getting answers will mean acting serious, and for this quirky young woman, that will be the performance of a lifetime. This ebook features a personal history by Adele Griffin including rare images and never-before-seen documents from the author’s own collection.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Capaciously evoked characters and settings are the draw in Griffin's second novel as the author exchanges the gravity of her Rainy Season for a bubblier plot. The narrator, 14-year-old Danny Finzimer (birth name Dandelion), lives with her free-spirited mom, a sometimes actress, in a small apartment in Philadelphia and attends the tony girls' school where her mother teaches drama. She has no memories of her father, but cherishes the romantic stories her mother has woven about him. Then Danny's mother loses a lucrative stint as the lead in a series of local commercials and, as Danny learns from her friends at school, takes up waitressing at a popular restaurant. As Danny fends off her classmates' patronizing remarks, she grows increasingly impatient with her mother, who says nothing about her new job and instead lies about where she is spending her time. Angry, Danny writes a letter to her father--which, in a stale plot device, she mixes up with an entry for a fiction contest--and soon discovers that her mother has fabricated the story of her courtship, too. What elevates this above a problem novel is Griffin's perceptiveness: Danny's effervescent narration brings her whole milieu to life, freeing the characters from simple typecasting as good guys or bad guys and allowing them to emerge as human and worthy of empathy. Diverting and rewarding. Ages 10-up.