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The Stories of Devil-Girl

par Anya Achtenberg

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Devil-Girl is a storyteller smaller than a stain and larger than life, a mythic figure roaming the globe. Born into Brooklyn housing projects and the nightmares of her immigrant family, she becomes a runaway in the human marketplace of the streets of New York. Accompanied by her sense of outrage and sense of humor, ghosts of the ancestors and her prophetic vision, she moves from silence through rage into deep alliance with the marginalized. "Poignant and fierce, this book is moving, beautifully written, and urgently relevant." "Devil-Girl's stories are all of our stories, all of the 'discarded and demonized', all of us who have had to fight to survive, to fight to tell our truths. Achtenberg's wise survivor, Devil-Girl, is witness and seer, and her words are sustenance. There is much pain in this book, much wisdom, and a kind of beauty that sears itself into memory, a fierce beauty that is as necessary as air. Read this book." -Lisa D. Chave, Author of Destruction Bay; In An Angry Season "Achtenberg is a cutting-edge voice in the literature of the postglobalization age, an era in which we are uprooted geographically and spiritually, and redefining what it means to be home. What a superbly written book Read it and be changed." -Demetria Martinez, Author of Mother Tongue "Stunning and original Powerful 'make it new' language that creates-through the runaway energy and precise detail of the storytelling voice-a disturbing world in all its particularities, only to transcend it by grappling with what's at stake in the larger world." -Stratis Haviaras, Founder and former editor of Harvard Review "An amazing piece of bravura writing Devil-Girl takes us from destitution to seedy glamour as a homeless vulnerable young woman tries to survive the savagery of the streets. Poignant and fierce, this book is moving, beautifully written, and urgently relevant." -Kathleen Spivack, Author, Director: Advanced Writing Workshop Book #1 in the Reflections of America Series Learn about the author at www.AnyaAchtenberg.com Modern History Press www.ModernHistoryPress.com an imprint of Loving Healing Press… (plus d'informations)
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    Blue Earth (Reflections of America) par Anya Achtenberg (LHPress)
    LHPress: Achtenberg's inimitable and excoriating style can be appreciated in both her novels.
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Affichage de 1-5 de 14 (suivant | tout afficher)
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
This sounded like a really interesting book, but maybe it just wasn't for me. I attempted to read it a couple of times. I just couldn't get into it, the style made it difficult to understand. ( )
  Rosereads | Jul 25, 2009 |
In an original and powerful mix of poetry and story telling, Anya Achtenberg lays herself bare in this partly autobiographical series of short stories.

The book delivers a strong message, even if it is painful.
Thought-provoking and well-written. ( )
  nellebabe | Jul 24, 2009 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
I was certain I'd written a reviewed this book after receiving it, but maybe my negative review was deleted?

The strange lyrical poetic prose was difficult to follow and impossible to connect with. I was completely turned off by the style of writing, grammar, prose and story. Unfortunately, not a book I'd even pass along...it was just not there for me.

It looks like it was a better fit for some other reviewers. That's great! I'm glad it has received some positive accolades. ( )
  novelnympho | Jul 9, 2009 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Achtenberg's primary calling is poetry and that is obvious in every page of her debut novella. Her prose is lyrical, ebbing and flowing like an epic poem. Sometimes the lyricism distracts from the story, but given how brutal the story is, it may be a necessary distraction. Devil-Girl is about a young woman who goes from a grim, abusive childhood to to an even bleaker adulthood. Homelessness, rape, and pornography are all part and parcel of Devil-Girl's life as she tries to find a home or at least a place to be safe. Achtenberg is short on the details of how her protagonist pulls herself out of the muck, but somehow she does and moves to the relatively safe environs of academia in Minnesotta before returning to face her demons in NYC. Achtenberg makes no promises of happily ever after but she does assure her readers that at least the worst is behind Devil Girl.

This work is steeped with suppressed emotion and offers a very bleak view of the world. Achtenberg seemed to be intentionally vague on the basics of the story (who, what, where, when and why) but highlighted snatches of the horrible experiences that her protagonist endured. I frequently felt like I was supposed to guess what the character was doing or thinking. The whole book seems to be enveloped in fog and I was constantly casting about trying to figure out what was going on.

Overall, Achetenberg seems to have taken the idea of "less is more" a little too far. She needs to flesh out her writing to make it true prose. Devil-Girl is somewhere between poetry and prose and that is a tough place for both reader and writer. ( )
  Menagerie | Aug 26, 2008 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
While I can't say I appreciated the writing style (very, very poetic and artsy), if you can get past that, the story is a very good one; though it is hard to extract most of the time. I think if it was written differently I would have a much greater opinion of it. ( )
  littlebear514 | Aug 17, 2008 |
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Devil-Girl is a storyteller smaller than a stain and larger than life, a mythic figure roaming the globe. Born into Brooklyn housing projects and the nightmares of her immigrant family, she becomes a runaway in the human marketplace of the streets of New York. Accompanied by her sense of outrage and sense of humor, ghosts of the ancestors and her prophetic vision, she moves from silence through rage into deep alliance with the marginalized. "Poignant and fierce, this book is moving, beautifully written, and urgently relevant." "Devil-Girl's stories are all of our stories, all of the 'discarded and demonized', all of us who have had to fight to survive, to fight to tell our truths. Achtenberg's wise survivor, Devil-Girl, is witness and seer, and her words are sustenance. There is much pain in this book, much wisdom, and a kind of beauty that sears itself into memory, a fierce beauty that is as necessary as air. Read this book." -Lisa D. Chave, Author of Destruction Bay; In An Angry Season "Achtenberg is a cutting-edge voice in the literature of the postglobalization age, an era in which we are uprooted geographically and spiritually, and redefining what it means to be home. What a superbly written book Read it and be changed." -Demetria Martinez, Author of Mother Tongue "Stunning and original Powerful 'make it new' language that creates-through the runaway energy and precise detail of the storytelling voice-a disturbing world in all its particularities, only to transcend it by grappling with what's at stake in the larger world." -Stratis Haviaras, Founder and former editor of Harvard Review "An amazing piece of bravura writing Devil-Girl takes us from destitution to seedy glamour as a homeless vulnerable young woman tries to survive the savagery of the streets. Poignant and fierce, this book is moving, beautifully written, and urgently relevant." -Kathleen Spivack, Author, Director: Advanced Writing Workshop Book #1 in the Reflections of America Series Learn about the author at www.AnyaAchtenberg.com Modern History Press www.ModernHistoryPress.com an imprint of Loving Healing Press

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