



The Blurry Years
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4.0 • 2 Ratings
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
*A Best Book of 2018 —Entropy
“Kriseman’s is a new voice to celebrate.” —Publishers Weekly
The Blurry Years is a powerful and unorthodox coming-of-age story from an assured new literary voice, featuring a stirringly twisted mother-daughter relationship, set against the sleazy, vividly-drawn backdrop of late-seventies and early-eighties Florida.
Callie—who ages from six to eighteen over the course of the book—leads a scattered childhood, moving from cars to strangers’ houses to the sand-dusted apartments of the tourist towns that litter the Florida coastline.
Callie’s is a story about what it’s like to grow up too fast and absorb too much, to watch adults behaving badly; what it’s like to be simultaneously in thrall to and terrified of the mother who is the only family you've ever known, who moves you from town to town to leave her own mistakes behind.
With precision and poetry, Kriseman's moving tale of a young girl struggling to find her way in the world is potent, and, ultimately, triumphant.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Kriseman's assured and affecting debut follows Callie from young childhood through her itinerant teenage years as she and her unpredictable, alcoholic mother, Jeanie, constantly attempt to restart and better their lives. In Tampa, Callie shifts loyalties between her mother's changing boyfriends and finds a lovable, stable adult in one of their brothers, Marcus, a person she will return to for comfort throughout her life. In Eugene, Ore., where Jeanie is originally from, after a desperate cross-country drive and nights spent sleeping in the car in parking lots, Callie and her mother reconnect with Jeanie's former best friend, Starr. And in Daytona Beach, Callie and her first real friend explore the darker side of the tourist town, trying on adulthood for the first time just as Callie's adolescence begins to look darkly and familiarly like her mother's life (depending on alcohol to get through her days and taking bad jobs instead of focusing on school), and she attempts to finally break out of the pattern of running she has always known. The novel's complicated mother/daughter relationship is provocative and richly developed, and Jeanie is an unforgettable, complex character: she starts the novel as difficult-but-loving but evolves into deep cruelty. Despite its too-neat ending, Callie's is an honest and memorable story about growing up in a world of bad examples. Kriseman's is a new voice to celebrate.