History Lesson for Girls
Aurelie Sheehan. Viking Books, $23.95 (352pp) ISBN 978-0-670-03767-4
Set in 1975, Sheehan's second novel skillfully depicts an adolescent girl's small but resonant steps toward adulthood; unfortunately, the bigger steps are handled with a bit too much theatricality. The teenage tendency toward obsession-whether for horses, a particular band or CD, or a single, all-consuming friendship-provides the fuel for this uneven suburban coming-of-age, capturing with artful simplicity the quotidian magic of an improbable friendship. Unpopular 13-year-old Alison Glass, new to Weston, Connecticut and afflicted with scoliosis, and the popular, independent Kate Hamilton discover one another and the world. Sheehan nails important adolescent moments like playing it cool when offered a first cigarette or having one's taste in music scrutinized by a new friend. The quiet pleasures of the pair's private moments clash with increasingly stagy subplots: Alison's persistent fear of undergoing surgery to correct her spine, the over-the-top violence of Kate's drunk, greedy father, and the indiscrete affair between him and Alison's hippie mother. Sheehan perceptively identifies the outside world as a corrupting agent in fragile friendships; however, as Kate herself comments, ""It's usually not so damn obvious.""
Details
Reviewed on: 07/03/2006
Genre: Fiction
Open Ebook - 368 pages - 978-1-4295-1531-3
Open Ebook - 368 pages - 978-1-101-20159-6
Paperback - 368 pages - 978-0-14-311190-0
Peanut Press/Palm Reader - 368 pages - 978-1-4295-1776-8