The first character to utter those words is Margaux Williamson (a character based on Margaux Williamson). Her friendship with Sheila (the character, not the author?not exactly, anyway) is the closest thing the story has to a driving narrative force. This is a story of girl meets girl, girl talks to girl, girl talks to girl again, girl buys same dress as girl, girl makes up with girl, and so forth. There are other friends in the constellation Heti presents, but they are dwarves to Margaux?s supergiant, at least in Sheila?s ordering of the universe. And it?s in her relationship with Margaux, a painter, that Sheila investigates, and reinvestigates, and reinvestigates, the question that obsesses her. This is not the kind of book you can really spoil, but I will say, right off the bat, that the process of asking turns out to be just as important as the answer.
Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=f2c7ffc03a9fc633301ee451bfdd0e46
the forgotten man mike jones just friends chronicle lance armstrong george lopez bedtime stories
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.