Girl Walking Backwards
Bett Williams
Although the protagonist of Girl Walking Backwards is a young, more-or-less ‘out’ lesbian, this not a lesbian novel so much as a classic, post-Catcher in the Rye roman à clef, closely observed and skillfully written. Skye has even fewer illusions than Holden Caulfield, but she manages to be cynical without being world-weary. She signs up for volleyball at her new high school only because the girls on the team are beautiful, then shrinks from making the first move toward them: ‘Making friends is such a formal thing,’ she reflects. ‘It would have been so convenient if we all drank. Puking is great bonding, holding your friend’s head over the toilet seat is kind of an intimate act. Puking friends come and go, though, at least that was my experience in junior high.’ When she catches sight of the doomed, black-clad Jessica, Skye thinks she has found a soulmate, but Jessica turns out to be a murky reflection of Skye’s mother–unhappy and unstable, feeling cheated by life. To what extent Skye will be pulled down into others’ trouble is the issue beneath the more pressing questions of whom she will love, and who will love her. A first novel of unusual distinction. –Regina Marler
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Details
ISBN | 312194560 |
Genre | Fiction |
Copyright Date | 1998 |
Publication Date | 28-Sep-98 |
Publisher | Griffin |
Format | Trade Paperback |
No. of Pages | 256 |
Language | English |
Rating | NotRated |
BookID | 4772 |