Latest Reads: Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter by Tom Franklin
Currently Reading: Eat, Pray, Love Melissa Gilbert (Suck it- I want to know what the fuss is about.)
Recent Musical Find: Mumford & Sons
My Take on Anthropology of American Girl by Hilary Thayer Hamann:
I actually finished Anthropology of American Girl about a month ago, but have been putting off posting an entry about it. The story centers around a young girl, Eveline, going through the transition from late teens to young adult in the early 80s. You meet her as a shy, clever, and completely underrated Long Island high-schooler with divorced middle class parents and a boyfriend whose friends don't like her. She's artistic and smart, but unsure of everything life has dealt her including the death of her best friend's mother, who also serves as her second mother and her own parents divorce.
The first part of the novel takes Evie through high school and introduces the reader to her friends, which are quite numerous for such a simple girl, and her family, which are actually rarely ever mentioned again after graduation. This was my favorite part of the book because Hamann does an extraordinary job of presenting life as an almost adult where you're free of bills and most responsibility, but on the verve of becoming aware of the wide world beyond (at least Evie does). The phrase you don't realize happened until it's past; childhood's end so to say.
Graduation, as it often does, signals the end of the "freedom" era and the beginning of the "free love" era. Evie leaves Jack, her high school love and rebel extraordinaire and begins dating Harrison Rourke, her one true love and former drama student teacher. For how scandalous that sounds, Hamann handles the situation like the most natural thing (which is how Evie and Rourke's relationship is always presented throughout the book and after all--it's not technically illegal by then).
After a summer love affair, complete with cohabitation, Evie moves to Manhattan to attend NYU as an art history major. Note: she's studying art, not making it. And her and Rourke end their unspoken commitment since he's going across country anyway. While in New York, Evie essentially looses herself for 3-4 years in friends, pseudo-friends, her own heartbreak and Mark, Mr. Rich-But-Wrong-For-So-Many-Reasons. Throughout these years you find yourself wondering why she doesn't just walk away (from Mark and/or New York), but without Rourke she hesitates to do or not to do anything. Instead she just lets life come at her, sometimes in lolling dulls or like a fast train. As Evie struggles to find her way, Rourke is rarely in sight, but always present through friends of friends or with the occasional chance meeting.
I admire Hamann's ending because while she ends it fairly how you want her to, she doesn't do so without giving you a few kicks for good measure which is sort of how life plays it most times as well.
Fair warning: the page count is close to 600 and I'm not sure that they're all absolutely necessary, but they are all absolutely good and well written. The journey is worth it, but I wouldn't recommend stretching the novel out over a long period--too many characters and events packed into these 6 years of Evie's life.
Hamann gets the coveted 5 out of 5 Cetoria's. (Congrats Hamann!)
-Sincerely Cetoria
Mmmm....
ReplyDelete