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Rose of No Man's Land (2005)

par Michelle Tea

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3601071,526 (3.49)9
Fiction. Short Stories. HTML:

Fourteen-year-old Trisha Driscoll is a hungry machine, taking in her hometown of Mogsfield, Massachusetts—a place that has shamelessly surrendered to neon signs, theme restaurants, and cookie-cutter chain stores. Cynical but naive, Trisha observes the disappointing world from the ignored perspective of a teenager: creepy guys, the unfathomable sadness of the elderly, illegal tattoos, and the wild kingdom of mall culture. After being hired and abruptly fired from the most popular shop at the absurd and kaleidoscopic Square One Mall, Trisha finds herself linked up with a chain-smoking, physically stunted mall rat named Rose, and her life shifts into manic overdrive. A whirlwind exploration of poverty and dropouts, Rose of No Man’s Land is the world according to Trisha—a furious love story between two weirdo girls, brimming with snarky observations and soulful wonderings on the dazzle-flash emptiness of contemporary culture. about THE AUTHOR Michelle Tea lives in San Francisco, where she is beloved for her writing, her spoken word, and her innovative arts organization that brought the world Sister Spit. Her published books include Rent Girl, The Chelsea Whistle, and Valencia. She loves—like, really loves—beauty products. from THE AUTHOR I grew up on the North Shore of Massachusetts. Last year I visited, grabbed a Slush at Richie’s King of Slush on Revere Beach Parkway. Cruised Route One in Saugus, our little Las Vegas New England, and pulled into a giant bookstore and shuffled around. I peeked around for The Chelsea Whistle, which sticks a female skewer through my nearby hometown. It wasn’t there. I felt hurt. What’s the point of writing if not to find your book splayed out on the “local writers” table in your hometown bookstore? I know Saugus isn’t my hometown, but it’s close enough. Plus, Chelsea doesn’t have any bookstores. I thought, what do I have to do, write a book about Saugus? Fine, then. Next stop was the Square One Mall, the place I would bring my adolescent holiday money the day after Christmas. Square One nowadays is glitzier than ever. Neon and fluorescence and all the clothes so bright and clutching at me through the glass windows. Teenaged girls everywhere in giant schools, jabbering in that North Shore accent. I felt giddy. Here’s my book.

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» Voir aussi les 9 mentions

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This was one of those books that catches you by surprise... that completely shocks you when you find out what it is really about. For me, it was a bit of a let down. I was hoping for an entertaining coming-of-age story that ended in a fun romance or fling of some sort. Instead it was kind of depressing. Still, it was entertaining if you are looking for the sort of story that pushes the boundaries of everyday norms. I wouldn't recommend it to any of my friends, but I also wouldn't tell them that it was a giant waste of time. ( )
  kamelaryan | Nov 17, 2010 |
My Rating: C

My Review:

The back of the book description for this book really doesn't describe very much about the story.
Without giving too much away this book is a bit about self discovery and a lot about self destruction. If the author was trying to tell a story about finding out who you are, I hope she wasn't aiming toward the age group she wrote about. I'm not for censorship in anyway shape or form, but I must say that I wouldn't want my child to read this book and then do what the characters in the book say as a way to find herself.

The writing itself was exceptional. I could easily picture everything that happened in my head as if I was there, even though there were times when I didn't want to be.

I gave this book a C rating because I thought that there was just about no resolution at the end. I recommend this to those who are looking for a 'different' story. ( )
  mybooksmylove | Aug 8, 2009 |
What starts out as a coming-of-age young adult novel turns into a life-changing love story that leaves the reader with more questions than it answers. Michelle Tea writes an excellent book that uncovers a wide-range of female characters and psychologies that explore a world seemingly against them.

Tea also examines the effects of class differences, yet veils her more serious themes with an entertaining plot and fast-moving story. Just when the story seems to become predictable, a new twist takes the characters in new directions.

Rose of No Man's Land takes a simple casts of people and explores their unique perspectives, forming a novel that turns itself into an introspective, yet entertaining, reading experience. ( )
  ironicqueery | Jul 15, 2009 |
not for my demographic. ( )
  damsorrow | Jun 11, 2009 |
So I had read Michelle Tea before; years ago her Passionate Mistakes... made a great impression on me, if nothing else because as a late teen I thought, "Shit, you can write in this anguished fucked up sloppy way and get it published?" and this was an inspiration for me to write. Besides that I loved it, that book being a veiled memoir of Tea's early years as a lost punk rock girl floating into drugs and leftist politics and prostitution. So the first thing that was stunning about A Rose... was her jacket photo, in which she's beaming in a huge smile with her glasses tilted invitingly downward as if she's the happiest most well adjusted person in the world, and I was thinking, "This is the same Michelle Tea?"

Anyway the narrative begins quietly enough, and at first I was put off by what I took to be a sort of vanillaness and commercialism - the prose is utterly polished and seamless - not what I expected. But it turns out that she can really write, and before I knew it I was swept up into the world of her 15 year old narrator, Trisha. The last two thirds of the novel flow beautifully and I read it in one sitting, the pages seemingly flipping themselves, as Trisha ventures away from her dysfunctional home, where she had build a cave in her bedroom, detached from life, dead inside or maybe just waiting to be reborn. Reading it I would be struck here and there suddenly by sharp memories of my own misspent youth, smoking stolen cigarettes behind the local gas station, skipping school to smoke a joint in the backseat of Erin's beat up Buick, the exhilarating confusion and of initial sexual encounters. It's a stunningly beautiful little coming of age story, one where, like in the real lives of genuinely thinking and feeling people (maybe all people) there are no resolutions, grand epiphanies, no final reaching of a stable plain where life is smooth sailing from here on. Definitely a must, if quick, read. ( )
  BorisVian | Aug 31, 2008 |
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Fiction. Short Stories. HTML:

Fourteen-year-old Trisha Driscoll is a hungry machine, taking in her hometown of Mogsfield, Massachusetts—a place that has shamelessly surrendered to neon signs, theme restaurants, and cookie-cutter chain stores. Cynical but naive, Trisha observes the disappointing world from the ignored perspective of a teenager: creepy guys, the unfathomable sadness of the elderly, illegal tattoos, and the wild kingdom of mall culture. After being hired and abruptly fired from the most popular shop at the absurd and kaleidoscopic Square One Mall, Trisha finds herself linked up with a chain-smoking, physically stunted mall rat named Rose, and her life shifts into manic overdrive. A whirlwind exploration of poverty and dropouts, Rose of No Man’s Land is the world according to Trisha—a furious love story between two weirdo girls, brimming with snarky observations and soulful wonderings on the dazzle-flash emptiness of contemporary culture. about THE AUTHOR Michelle Tea lives in San Francisco, where she is beloved for her writing, her spoken word, and her innovative arts organization that brought the world Sister Spit. Her published books include Rent Girl, The Chelsea Whistle, and Valencia. She loves—like, really loves—beauty products. from THE AUTHOR I grew up on the North Shore of Massachusetts. Last year I visited, grabbed a Slush at Richie’s King of Slush on Revere Beach Parkway. Cruised Route One in Saugus, our little Las Vegas New England, and pulled into a giant bookstore and shuffled around. I peeked around for The Chelsea Whistle, which sticks a female skewer through my nearby hometown. It wasn’t there. I felt hurt. What’s the point of writing if not to find your book splayed out on the “local writers” table in your hometown bookstore? I know Saugus isn’t my hometown, but it’s close enough. Plus, Chelsea doesn’t have any bookstores. I thought, what do I have to do, write a book about Saugus? Fine, then. Next stop was the Square One Mall, the place I would bring my adolescent holiday money the day after Christmas. Square One nowadays is glitzier than ever. Neon and fluorescence and all the clothes so bright and clutching at me through the glass windows. Teenaged girls everywhere in giant schools, jabbering in that North Shore accent. I felt giddy. Here’s my book.

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