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Grosse Pointe Girl : Tales from a Suburban Adolescence

Grosse Pointe Girl : Tales from a Suburban Adolescence

List Price: $12.00
Your Price: $9.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A slice of home
Review: At first, Sarah Grace McCandless book 'Grosse Pointe Girl' sounds like tripe; one expects to find girlish babbling smattered with the recounting of adolescent misadventures amid the socially elite. However, beyond the borders that separate Grosse Pointe (GP) from Detroit, lying past the white picked fences of perfection instituted in an ivy-covered village, comes the refreshingly candid tale of a teen caught between being the in-crowd and an outsider.

The 8 brief emotive chapters recount growing up on the fringes of the elite, as an impressionable and vulnerable high school girl secretly harboring self-doubt while trying to fit in with her perennial friends. Chapters of 'Grosse Pointe Girl,' such as 'The Lochmoor Moms,' or 'The One That Wasn't,' ring with the simple teenage truths that can be found only at the mall, a high school dance, or swimming by a lake. These emotional truths found in each chapter are framed with vivid imagery that forces the scene upon the reader, such as the narrators' description of her "always casual" suitors and their "tan lean bodies" that resembled "stretched pieces of caramel," or GP wives sneaking away from their husbands to smoke "white menthol sticks...caked with fuschia rose lipstick." Each chapter is perfectly self-contained like an island onto itself, punctuated by a vague timelessness like fog rolling in or a cinematic fade to black.

Engaging and thoughtful, even emotionally overwhelming at times, Grosse Pointe Girl is a rich and delightful narrative of self discovery that stands apart from other Grosse Pointe based literature. Appropriately, the final chapter of 'Grosse Pointe Girl,' 'Reunion,' finds the narrator attending her 10-year reunion; a circumstance where memories tend to resurface sugarcoated, freeze-dried, and sentimental. However, in 'Grosse Pointe Girl' the reunion is recounted with a quiet and unexpected truthfulness that will surprise.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Grosse Pointe Girl
Review: Grosse Pointe Girl by Sarah Grace McCandless is not a typical diary from the well-to-do in this northern suburb of Detroit. It is instead almost an understated peek at the angst of the adolescence of one of its residents. It is not a whine, and like fine wine, the flavor is subtle yet rich. It truly sneaks up on you. Each chapter is well written with a vivid imagery, but "The Lochmoor Moms" is truly the apex. In one final sentence, Ms. McCandless captures the sense of a generation in suburbia.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: tragically true
Review: I ran from Grosse Pointe as fast as I could after graduating from high school, and this book reminded me why I did so. Many of the stories are certainly universal -- the angst, the inferiority, the self-deprication -- but some are quite specifically "upper middle class" and horrible to remember. Written with bleak honesty and utter clarity, the book was tough to read from an emotional perspective. Worth it, certainly for anyone with adolescent daughters growing up in a community like this one.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Rings so true...
Review: It's been awhile since I was a teenager, but this book brought it all back - the joys, the angst, the discomfort, the mystery that is high school and beyond. If you liked this book you might also like "The Year of Secret Assignments" by Jaclyn Moriarty and "An Egg on Three Sticks" by Jackie Moyer Fischer.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Rings so true...
Review: Spanning the years of Emma Harris's middle school to 10-year reunion experience, GROSSE POINTE GIRL is a short, yet revealing look at adolescence. Remember the days of 'going' with someone, terrifying, yet hopeful school dances, and navigating the dangerous waters of female friendships? It's all captured here in snapshot form.

Grosse Pointe is a suburb of Detroit and after Emma's parents divorce, she is living on the fringes of the affluent area of town. During the course of the book she ditches her best friend for the popular crowd, gets ditched by the popular crowd, loses her virginity, finds true friendship and love, and learns the meaning of loss.

The writing is spare, but it allows you to see through to the rigidity and sameness of adolescence and suburban life.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Well-Told But Well-Worn Coming of Age Story
Review: Thirteen brief chapters charter the coming-of-age of Emma Harris, beginning with her relocation to Detroit's upscale Grosse Point suburbs during the summer before sixth grade. Although capably written, Emma's story is a collage of familiar awkward moments and cliches seen in countless memoirs and movies about the American teenager. In a sense, this gives it a certain warmth and comfort, in a "we've all been there, sister" kind of way. On the other hand, McCandless never really gives Emma's journey any new twist or perspective, which is a little disappointing. She is immediately befriended by a nice girl next door, whom she ditches as soon as the cool girls start to be nice to her (although why they do is not apparent), and then eventually spurn her in turn. She struggles with the usual uncertainties of her first crush and first kiss, embarrassment of her first period, and disappointment of losing her virginity. In short, all the familiar touchstones of the female coming-of-age story are here, in a well-told, but ultimately well-worn tale.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Impressive
Review: This is a book that I stole from my girlfriend at the beach, and became increasingly attached as I read. I would say that the female 'coming of age' novel has now officially been updated, much in the same way that David Eggers' "A Heartbreaking Work.." has updated the genre for men.


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