A Stone Gone Mad by Jacquelyn Holt Park

A Stone Gone Mad

Jacquelyn Holt Park

From Library Journal

Emily Stolle has always followed her heart, and when she is 16 years old it leads her to her sister’s best friend Mattie–with calamitous results. This being the Fifties, the family’s discovery of Emily and Mattie making love in a pile of autumn leaves leads to immediate reprisal: her stepmother leaves, her sister abandons her forever, and her father sends her immediately to a strict boarding school and an uncomprehending psychoanalyst. Emily struggles through years of trying to live ‘normally’ and then years of trying to come to terms with her ‘perversion.’ The reader is swept along in her turbulent wake, suffering her pain and confusion with her, flinching at slights and cheering her on when she decides to stop living a lie. Park has exceptional command of language, plot, and character for a first novelist, speaking to the fears we all have of being different even as she illuminates the feelings of those ostracized for just that reason. Her subject is serious, while her smoothly paced writing has the effervescence of the best popular fiction. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 6/1/91.

– Barbara Hoffert, ‘Library Journal’

Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews

A Sapphic coming-of-age debut novel that’s poetic in fits and starts and frank, but much too slow about getting its protagonist to face her big problem–i.e., exiting the closet. Fifteen-year-old Emily Stolle of White River, New Hampshire, first recognizes that girls turn her on when her big sister’s best buddy, Mattie, starts meeting her for trysts on the terrace behind Emily’s house. Alas, Dad (a widower who keeps his distance from his daughters) and straight-laced sister Sheila stumble onto the pair, resulting in a boarding school for Emily and a further breakup of the already fractured family. It’s the Fifties, so Emily tries to bury herself in the trappings of adolescent sexuality–bras, hot petting sessions with beaus in the backseats of cars, etc. But in college her urges resurface and are played out with a friend who retreats from Emily once the two of them achieve consummation. Then it’s off to beat New York, where Emily studies English at Columbia and defeatedly accepts the fact that she’s a lesbian, frequenting downtown gay bars with names like Circle 3, The Naughty Angle, and Pandy’s. It takes a few unsatisfactory relationships before she finds a woman she can love. Still, Emily can’t bring herself to tell her friend Lillian–the only person from her past who means anything to her–that she’s gay. But then Lillian admits she has terminal cancer, and that opens up Emily’s floodgates at last. Certainly this will speak to gay audiences, but as documented here Emily’s sexual journey is surprisingly unsurprising. It also lacks the more general emotional resonance of an erotic chronicle like David Guy’s The Autobiography of My Body. — Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.


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Details

ISBN 394558618
Genre Fiction
Copyright Date 1991
Publication Date 24-Sep-91
Publisher Random House
Format Hardcover
No. of Pages 322
Language English
Rating NotRated
BookID 12416

Author: LFWBooks