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The Blue Girl - by Laurie Foos (Paperback)

The Blue Girl - by  Laurie Foos (Paperback)
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Last Price: 15.95 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>A blue girl lives in the woods, eating secrets baked into moon pies, and shaking up a small lakeside town.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>In this small lakeside town, mothers bake their secrets into moon pies they feed to a silent blue girl. Their daughters have secrets too--that they can't sleep, that they might sleep with a neighbor boy, that they know more than they let on. But when the daughters find the blue girl, everyone's carefully held silences shake loose.</p><p><b>Laurie Foos</b> is the author of five previous novels: <i>Before Elvis There Was Nothing</i>, <i>Ex Utero</i>, <i>Portrait of the Walrus by a Young Artist</i>, <i>Twinship</i>, and <i>Bingo Under the Crucifix</i>. She teaches in the low-residency MFA program at Lesley University in Cambridge.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>With spare prose and a keen ear for the clipped interactions of people in denial . . . Foos untangles the troublesome knot that binds the families together one kinked strand at a time. Foos effortlessly inserts a humanized sin-eater into the center of a complex, emotionally volatile group of families, creating a work that is haunting and healing in equal measure. <em><strong>--Kirkus Reviews</strong></em></p> <p>Foos' prose has an ethereal quality as she describes the person in the woods, and the allure surrounding her always. . . . This novel is not so much a puzzle to be solved as it is an experience to be had. Something to be tasted and consumed, crumbs falling by the wayside along with our useless insecurities. <em><strong>--</strong></em><em><strong>NPR</strong></em></p> <p>"Told in alternating points of view, <em>The Blue Girl</em> explores how these relationships both define and confine each of the women. Foos has crafted a surreal story that is suffocating yet utterly compelling." <em><strong>--Shelf Awareness for Readers</strong></em></p> <p>"Foos has found her way into a different kind of surrealist story, one in which the prose has a rhythmic lilt, one that never rushes, but lingers inside the minds of the characters, uncovers their secrets one by one, and floats on their interweaving narratives." <strong><em>--Newfound Journal</em></strong></p> <p>"[<em>The Blue Girl</em>] winds beautiful prose with the stark, sorrowful imagery of loss, misunderstanding, and the ever-tightening, close-to-breaking ties of family." <em><strong>--Full Stop</strong></em></p> <p>"<em>The Blue Girl</em> such an emotionally driven experience is the elegant language and creative use of metaphor. . . . I recommend Laurie Foos' <em>The Blue Girl</em> as a novel that tells a familiar story of grief in a unique way through an incredibly genuine set of female voices."<em><strong>--Blotterature</strong></em></p> <p>Laurie Foos is a weird Midas--everything she touches turns strange. . . . Each novel is as hysterical, weird, and heartbreaking as the last. --<strong><em>The Rumpus</em></strong></p> <p>"Inventively told from six perspectives, Laurie Foos's engaging novel <em>The Blue Girl</em> is a surreal yet very readable account of secrets and despair." <em><strong>--Largehearted Boy</strong></em></p> <p>The prose is clean, exacting and approachable, which makes the arrangement of the book--and the swirling vortex of complicated psychologies--even more impressive and heartbreaking. <em><strong>--Star Tribune</strong></em></p> <p>Reading Laurie Foos' <em>The Blue Girl</em> is like peering into someone else's dream . . . an entrancing experience. <strong>--<em>Nomadic Press</em></strong></p> <p>"Part fantasy, totally fantastical, this is a book that will give your sweet tooth a twinge of the rottenness . . . and a taste of the dark secrets unsaid, especially those between mothers and daughters." <strong>--<em>The Riveter, </em>Books to Read: Summer 2015</strong></p> <p>To put it plainly, Laurie Foos has written a stunning novel about despair. <em><strong>--</strong></em><em><strong>Entropy</strong></em></p> <p>"If <em>The Blue Girl</em> resists the gratifications of 'realism' and its click-shut resolutions, she goes further by using language to let us experience the desires embedded in our deprivations." <em><strong>--On the Seawall</strong></em></p> <p>"At turns lyrical, absurd, and heartbreaking, her fabulist novel about this strange blue girl explores the strangeness in all of us." <em><strong>--Memorious Blog</strong></em></p> <p>"Strangely beautiful . . . Foos's talent for both subtle and fantastical imagery, the novel really feels like an unpredictable and emotional thrill ride." <em><strong>--NewPages</strong></em></p> <p>Foos strikes a brilliant balance in acknowledging common similarities while also infusing her novel with overarching themes and big questions, all wrapped up in her fantastical blue girl. <em><strong>--River City Reading</strong></em></p> <p>"<em>The Blue Girl</em> such an emotionally driven experience is the elegant language and creative use of metaphor. . . . I recommend Laurie Foos' <em>The Blue Girl</em> as a novel that tells a familiar story of grief in a unique way through an incredibly genuine set of female voices."<em><strong><em><strong>--</strong></em></strong></em><strong><em>Blottature</em></strong></p> <p>"Although the premise is fantastical, Foos grounds it in the relationships (and secrets) within families, especially between mothers and daughters." <em><strong>--BookPage</strong></em></p> <p>"Laurie Foos has a knack for the surreal with a side of feminism." <strong>--<em>Dame Magazine</em></strong></p> <p>"A strange dark modern day fairy tale . . . dreamlike and sensory." <strong>--KAXE Northern Community Radio</strong></p> <p>"The novel deeply understands what it is to be a woman struggling with her role as wife and mother. . . . [It] impresses on its readers the strength that a secret can tangibly and physically carry-enough weight to make up an ingredient in a cake." <strong><strong>--<em>Samantha Preddie</em></strong></strong></p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Laurie Foos is the author of five previous novels: <i>Before Elvis There Was Nothing</i>, <i>Ex Utero</i>, <i>Portrait of the Walrus by a Young Artist</i>, <i>Twinship</i>, and <i>Bingo Under the Crucifix</i>. She teaches in the Low-Residency MFA Program at Lesley University in Cambridge and lives just outside of Boston.

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