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All These Girls

All These Girls
Author: Ellen Slezak
Publisher: Hyperion
Category: Book

List Price: $31.95
Buy Used: $0.01
You Save: $31.94 (100%)



New (23) Used (29) Collectible (1) from $0.01

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 1670620

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 384
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 5.7 x 1.2

ISBN: 0786867426
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN: 9780786867424
ASIN: 0786867426

Publication Date: August 4, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
andy Golden is in trouble. Her mother has died. And she's quit her team after being falsely accused of having sex with her Detroit high school basketball coach. Her aunts are hurting too: Grandaunt Gloria's husband had a fatal stroke nine months ago, and Aunt Elizabeth and her husband have just divorced. Still, Glo and Elizabeth travel to Candy from their homes in Chicago and LA to set the girl straight and get her back on the basketball court. Glo plans the weeklong road trip to Northern Michigan-her idea is to save Candy with a combination of tough love and religious dogma. Elizabeth trails along at Glo's command. But Glo, Elizabeth, and Candy end up not at the Cross in the Woods shrine as Glo intended but in the economically depressed, fictional Northern Michigan town of Lovely, where they encounter a host of characters who cause them to rethink their commitment to each other. What emerges in this unlikely place is a ferocious game of emotional basketball, which ultimately leads these three women to face each other and the choices they've made.


Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars Ugh.   December 1, 2007
Lately, I've been reading collections of short stories. Including Ms Slezak's, 'Last Year's Jesus'. I'm a writer, and was looking to understand the form more. What I learned was a) tremendous amounts of latitude are afforded even the most lauded of collections, and b) 'short stories' these days don't mean short stories. They mean 'situations'. Bottom line: short story writers aren't storytellers. The tales they publish may have style, power, even entertainment value, but they aren't generally proof of a story well told.

'All These Girls' is proof that celebrated short fiction writers aren't necessarily adept at writing novels. Several references come to mind when I think of my impressions of the book: 'ham-fisted', 'ill-conceived' and 'beyond her grasp'.

I wanted to stop reading about fifty pages in. The dialogue is, by far, some of the worst I've ever encountered. Most of the exchanges between characters (predicated on dialogue, of course) possess no credibility whatever. And the characters themselves... It wasn't even so much a group of unlikable ones being gathered together, it was that very little about what they did or said rang true at all. (There were moments when I felt a man must have written this novel, because the insight into a woman's world was sorely lacking.)

What was most painful about reading 'All These Girls' were the reminders that Ms Slezak has some very powerful skills as a writer. (Well, as a writer of short fiction, anyway.) She has a well-vocabularied style, and a nice way with turning a phrase. But as far as writing a compelling story goes? I believe she should be reminded of a standard credo: 'Show, don't tell.'

At its worst, this novel is a bad attempt at something Richard Russo would have crafted into something magnificent. At its best, it's a polemic, a badly-executed attempt to plough into a narrative all manner of personal insight, Life philosophies, and Psych 101 notes. And I'm not sure there's much between the 'worst' and the 'best'. Truly a wasted effort 'nonpareil'.

Paraphrasing the moviegoer feeling ripped-off by a bad film, "I want my four days back, please."



5 out of 5 stars A story of emotional transformation, hope, and forgiveness   October 7, 2004
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

All These Girls by Ellen Slezak is the story of a bond between a young woman and aunts. Candy Golden has lost her mother, and quit her high school basketball team in the wake of accusations of having sex with her coach. Her Grandaunt Gloria struggles to help Candy straighten out and reclaim the energy to return to the basketball court, while her other, more distant aunt Elizabeth reluctantly comes along in what is meant to be a rejuvenating trip. Yet the travel goes off-course, and places the three of them in a remote locale, confronted by characters that will make them re-examine who they all are and what they are striving for in life. A story of emotional transformation, hope, and forgiveness in troubled times.



5 out of 5 stars A rich portrait of choice   September 20, 2004
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

All These Girls is that rare multi-generational novel about real women and girls that doesn't pander to its characters. In this rich, engrossing novel, the author presents three principled women as they are -- without condescension or excuses or undue praise. The story of their journey together isn't just that of a family coming together despite their differences, it's a celebration of those differences. As Glo's staunch Catholicism, Elizabeth's driving (but not always welcome) need for autonomy, and Candy's stubborn desire to confound expectations collide, they all find themselves not so much changed as enriched. This would be a terrific book group book, I think, because it's not only a great read -- lots of unexpected humor and intelligent insight here -- it raises a good many questions on how women and girls choose -- or must choose -- their way in life. The central narrative in this novel is a reluctant pilgrimmage, and I couldn't imagine a more apt metaphor for the journey many women make alongside their mothers, aunts, daughters, and nieces as their lives take shape. Highly recommended.


5 out of 5 stars Powerful, moving work   August 12, 2004
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

What a superb book this is! Slezak skillfully braids the lives of three women incompatible in every way--age, aptitude, beliefs--who are nevertheless held together by the stubborness of affection and the long guilt of family ties. Affecting without ever being remotely maudlin, the characters grope through their long-cherished anger and resentment to arrive at a new balance of compassion. Written with wit and often gorgeous power, the book will linger long with its readers.

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