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Women's Fiction

The Adventures of Flash Jackson: A Novel

The Adventures of Flash Jackson: A Novel

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.97
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: The adventures of a totally fictional girl
Review: I actually got to meet this author when he did a book show at my local book store. His first book Eddies Bastard ranks as one of the best novels I have ever read. This book didn't dissapoint. The book is about a girl Haney Bombauer which through me off because Eddies Bastard is about a boy growing up and after my girlfriend just broke up with me I really didn't want to hear about a girl's life. I went ahead and read it and this book is awesome. I have given it to 3 people and they all loved it. You will fall in love with Haneys personality and the charachters that pop up in the book will make you laugh.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Promise not met
Review: I gotta say I was disappointed. Haley of Part One was an interesting character; I was hoping to discover more of her in Part Two. Instead, the story goes in another direction entirely. Now that I've finished the book (and at the risk of giving away the plot too badly), it started going downhill after the grandmother was written out. Moreover, some loose ends are leftover at the conclusion (for example: in Part One, Miss Powell's personal life seems to be loaded with innuendo; in Part Two, she's just sort of "there" as a secondary character).
The last 25% of the book seemed predictable. I went from "She seems kinda neat" at the end of Part One to "Who cares!" at the end of Part Two.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: adolescent coming of age fantasy
Review: I have to admit that I did not complete this novel. The overly chatty, talk to the reader style made it apparent to me that I was not the target audience (an adult who reads obscure literature & speculative fiction) even though this was in the adult section. The excessive swearing and enthusiasim felt like sloppy and lazy writing to me. However, teenagers who normally read Charles de Lint, Holly Black and Emma Bull looking for light, escapist fiction may want to check this book out, as it deals with identity, ethnicity and spiritual issues with a light hearted touch.

I personally recommend anything by Charles de Lint or Marion Zimmer Bradley over this, if you are a more selective reader.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: The Adventures of Flash Jackson
Review: Our book club just finished reading "Flash" and we all agreed it was a thumbs down experience. The author seemed to be writing from several different time periods which was confusing. I think a male author trying to describe a young girl coming of age didn't work in this story. I felt like the author had some real inconsistancies regarding what might be typical of a girl this age, the setting and climate, and relationships between the main characters. There were many incidents thrown in that didn't seem to relate to anything else in the story and I ended up wondering why they were there and how they fit into the story.
If I had not been reading the book for book club, I would not have finished it. Although the young girl held your attention in the first few chapters, one soon tired of her and the weirdness and loose ends that followed. The characters lacked much dimension or definition.
I would recommend going for another title and not wasting your money or time on this one. So many other good ones out there!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: adolescent coming of age fantasy
Review: This book is a fun read. Kowalski excels at creating an isolation in which magic can flourish for his characters. In Haley Bombauer's case, this magic is literal, and she participates in it. Yes, the girl is a witch.

The setting is well-realized, the characters developed. Haley is a kick in the pants. There's neighbors and horses and weather and the freedom and boredom of small town living. But I didn't like everything about this book. Haley teeters between childhood and adulthood, and it shows in her diction, which at times becomes a veering mishmash of gee-golly, expletives and look-it-up-in-the-OED. The juxtapositions made my head spin, but completely charmed my 17 year-old daughter. Since she's Haley's age, I think Kowalski is on to something.

Haley's coming-of-age elements are imbued with magic in the way that Billy Mann's (the hero of Eddie's [ ]and Somewhere South of Here) were imbued with history. This writer makes an awareness of family history a huge part of his characters' emerging identities. That, along with the gentle "women can do/be/have everything" message, make this an interesting (and conversation-encouraging) read for young women.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not What I Expected, But Still Good
Review: Unlike most stories using "Book 1" and "Book 2" as an arbitrary way of dividing the story into sections, in The Adventures of Flash Jackson, Book 2 seems like almost a completely different girl and story than before.

Haley Bombauer is a feisty and lovable heroine, who has always been a tomboy and plans on staying one for life. She's sick of her mother and gossipy small town neighbours trying to get her to be more ladylike. I found her views on everything amusing and fresh.

When Haley falls off the roof of her barn and breaks her leg, she's looking at a long, boring summer. I thought this book would be about her coming to terms with her injury, her father's death, her friend Frankie's schizophrenia. It's not. This is not just a coming of age story. It morphs into something reminiscent of "Nell", where she moves into the woods with her reclusive grandmother and shuts herself off from society for almost a year. As much as some readers will probably be weirded out by the drastic changes in plot and character, I was fascinated by the stories about herbal lore and how her grandmother is actually an age old spirit inhabiting the magical woods (I will say it once again: This is not your average coming of age story! It looks like general fiction, but it becomes fantasy almost).

If you told me how it ended when I first started the book, I would have been shocked beyond belief, but by the time I got there, I was used to the changes and found it really interesting. This book is certainly different, but this reader enjoyed it immensely.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Would Love to See it Serialized
Review: Who is Flash Jackson? Flash is the alter ego of 16 year old Haley Bombauer, a tomboy in search of her authentic self. The self she learns was there all along. With Flash Jackson around she doesn't have to face her fears or come to terms with her losses. The Adventures of Flash Jackson is written from the perspective of a twenty something Haley. Her nickname, Flash Jackson, stemmed from a game she played with her now deceased father in which they pretended to be stuntmen.

Kowalski has written Haley's voice as educated, conversational, witty and without shame. I found myself reading her voice with a light southern twang even though the story takes place just outside the fictional town of Mannville, New York. Haley tells the reader that this is "a record of my seventeenth year," and she warns "I'm writing this for myself..." This kind of tongue in cheek candor is speckled throughout. The fact that her mouth sometimes moves faster than her thoughts is amusing despite the trouble she gets into or the hurt feelings she creates. She struggles to make the things and people around her bend to her will but once she becomes incapacitated she learns she really doesn't have the control she thinks she does.

During one of Haley's tomboy adventures she breaks her leg in three places causing her to be bed-ridden. Through her forced immobilization she begins to learn new things about the people in her life that ultimately leads to the realization of her own character and the development of the woman she is to become.

Haley is accompanied through her year of reminiscing by her slightly neurotic, lonely mother; her pot-growing, Mennonite grandmother; her schizophrenic friend Frank; her guidance counselor, neighbor Ms. Powell and a host of wildlife, domesticated and otherwise.

I was skeptical from the beginning that Kowalski could pull off a feminine character (my bias) but quickly forgot about the writer's gender as I became absorbed in Haley's life and surroundings. Especially when she went off to live with her grandmother in the forest, secluded from people and without what we know as the bare necessities: electricity, running water, and indoor toilet. While with her grandmother Haley learns many things about the natural arts and an appreciation for silence.

In the beginning Haley tries to fight the laws of nature but succumbs due to wasted effort and little success. A good example would be bathing. She fought to keep some form of cleanliness but her daily toils prevented her so she gave in and developed an awareness of her new odor.

I do not have many complaints about this book save one. The grandmother's dialogue is difficult and slowed down reading unnecessarily. "Den varom willst Du k no from ich?" I would have preferred a description of her dialect rather than trying to decipher her speech patterns.

Witchcraft has saturated the film and TV industry over the last few years. It seems have become a fad in many instances and although it appears in this story it doesn't overwhelm or take anything away from the characters. The magic in Flash Jackson is more than a belief system. It's the everyday magic right in front of our eyes.

The Adventures of Flash Jackson is a complete book but I want to know what adventures Haley Bombauer survived after her 17th year. I hope Kowalski will consider serializing Haley. I'm sure you will too.

Review Originally Posted at http://www.linearreflections.com


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