My sister slept with the light on until she was 27. She rightfully blames me. I would leap out of closets with my hands made into claws. I would...
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Michelle Tea, a long-time favorite with streetwise memoir readers, proved she could pull off a novel with Rose of No Man's Land. It's like Freaks and Geeks with lesbians. Tea's writing dazzles and hurts in all the right places and her comic timing has never been better. Recommended by Kevin Sampsell, Powell's City of Books
Synopses & Reviews
Publisher Comments:
Fourteen-year-old Trisha Driscoll is a gender-blurring, self-described loner whose family expects nothing of her. While her mother lies on the couch in a hypochondriac haze and her sister aspires to be on The Real World, Trisha struggles to find her own place among the neon signs, theme restaurants, and cookie-cutter chain stores of her hometown.
After being hired and abruptly fired from the most popular clothing shop at the local mall, Trisha befriends a chain-smoking misfit named Rose, and her life shifts into manic overdrive. A "postmillennial, class-adjusted My So-Called Life" (Publishers Weekly), Rose of No Man's Land is brimming with snarky observations and soulful musings on contemporary teenage America.
Review:
"Tea follows up her Lambda Award — winning San Francisco prostitution memoir, Valencia (2000), her sporadically transcendent collected poems, The Beautiful (2003), and last year's graphic novel, Rent Girl (now in development for TV), with this inspired queer bildungsroman. In Trisha Driscoll, Tea has developed an unreliable narrator who stands on her own. Trisha is a doughy, alcoholic 10th-grade denizen of Mogsfield, Mass., a fictional white trash nowhere. Her father is long gone; her mother, owing to psychosomatic back problems, does not leave the couch; her mother's boyfriend, Donnie, enters the kitchen only to make ramen; her younger sister, Kristy, is obsessed with launching herself onto reality TV and constantly films the family dysfunctioning around her. The first half of the novel establishes Trisha's grim bedroom-to-mall despair. In the second, a new friend, Rose, a fry cook who looks 12 — appears, and the two go on a crystal meth — fueled adventure with blissful highs and crashing lows. Tea is brilliant in making the stakes for Trisha abundantly clear as she discovers sex (and, concurrently, her sexuality), drugs and the emotional gains and losses attendant to each. Add in minor characters like the never-seen but oft-discussed Kim Porciatti and various dumb guys in cars, and you have a postmillennial, class-adjusted My So-Called Life." Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
Review:
"The heroine of 'Rose of No Man's Land,' Michelle Tea's riotous paean to teenage-girl lonerdom, is Trisha Driscoll, a world-weary 14-year-old who sits in her room guzzling beer. She lives in a blue-collar suburb of Boston with her hypochondriac slacker mom, her mom's 'mulleted loser' boyfriend and her hairdresser sister Kristy, whose big plan for the summer is to put together an audition tape for 'The... Washington Post Book Review (read the entire Washington Post review) Real World' — 'so that some stupid MTV person fascinated with white trash people will see that Kristy is the real thing, stick her on the show, and wait for her to say ignorant things to the black person and the gay person.' Trisha may not get out much, but she's wise to the ways of the world. Her own ambitions are touchingly modest: to make a friend. She meets an unlikely candidate at the mall. Waifish and street-savvy, Rose leads Trisha on a wild hitchhiking adventure involving a stolen cellphone, a drug-dealing pedophile and a tattoo parlor. Hopped-up on crystal meth, the girls get frisky with each other at the local putt-putt. Not bad for a first night out. What keeps you glued to the page through the weavings of plot is Trisha's wry commentary, delivered with teenage-girl brio, on everything from family life and mall culture to the evils of television and cigarettes. Here's Trisha on the subject of her mother's live-in boyfriend: 'Ma says about Donnie: 'At least he doesn't bother you girls.' By 'bother' she means 'try to have sex with,' and she says it like we, me and Kristy, should drop to our knees and kiss the peeling linoleum and prostrate ourselves to the patron saint of creepy dudes for sending us such a winner. I think the biggest problem between me and my family ... is we have really different standards.' For Trisha, the evening with Rose is also a journey of sexual self-discovery and a hard lesson in the quickly shifting allegiances of female friendship. Tea — who has published four other books, including 'Rent Girl,' an illustrated novel based on her experiences as a lesbian prostitute — strikes a nice balance between drug-fueled sexual experimentation and the quieter concerns of a traditional coming-of-age story. Her novel is full of fire and sass and honest, good writing, and it seems marked for cult status among teen girls. Anne Taylor Fleming's new novel is an entirely different foray into the territory of fraught female relationships. 'As If Love Were Enough' tells the story of Clare and Louise Layton, two sisters who grew up in California in the '60s, struck out on different life paths and became estranged. Clare, the protagonist, moved to New York and fully embraced its lifestyle. She makes her living writing 'think pieces' for women's magazines, eats her takeout on real china with silverware and a cloth napkin, and plays mistress to an older married man. She's no Pollyanna harboring illusions about marital bliss and babies in Bugaboo strollers, but all the same she can't quite keep at bay the fear of becoming 'one of those aging, well-kept-up girl-women I see all around the city ... quiet hair, good coats and scarves, plucky and attractive but a little pallid from lives unlived, children unhad ... coming back to their one-bedroom apartments, just like this one.' Louise's surprise appearance in New York dramatically upends Clare's established routine. Clare becomes convinced, mistakenly, that her sister is on the run from an abusive marriage. But Louise actually wants Clare's help in a very different matter: Her 17-year-old son needs a liver transplant, and Louise hopes that her journalist sister might publicize his case and improve his chances on the organ-donor list. The rest of the novel is taken up with Clare's struggle to conquer her anger at her sister for wrongs past and present, to do the right thing by her sick nephew (a charismatic evangelical Christian) and to sort out how she feels about her long-standing affair. Plunked in the middle of all this is a lengthy flashback chronicling Clare and Louise's childhood as the daughters of a television actress and a Hollywood screenwriter. It's meant to flesh out the characters and contextualize their anxieties, but it reads like a chunk from another novel. Fleming writes lively prose, has a good eye for detail and takes her story, which starts out in shopworn 'Sex and the City' territory, in an interesting and unexpected direction. But one also gets the sense that she wasn't sure when to call it quits. This book — a family saga, a love story, a religious sojourn and a medical drama all rolled into one — feels overstuffed. And the favorable resolution of all of these story lines can't help but seem like a contrivance." Reviewed by Julia Livshin, a former staff editor at the Atlantic Monthly, Washington Post Book World (Copyright 2006 Washington Post Book World Service/Washington Post Writers Group) (hide most of this review)
Review:
"Rose is balls-out from the start....Tea's writing is raw, funny, and tragic, but never forced. Her memoirist's eye yields fiction that reads true. (Grade: A-)" Entertainment Weekly
Review:
"A riotous coming-of-age novel about a misanthropic girl's sexual self-discovery...Tea is trying to do for working-class teenage lesbians what S. E. Hinton's Rumble Fish and The Outsiders did for greasers and street-brawling tough guys in the 1970s and '80s: to let them be heard and felt." Lenora Todaro, The New York Times Book Review
Review:
"[B]oth a riotously funny coming-of-age story and a poignant cautionary tale that smacks of 'there but for the grace of God' heartbreak....What gives Rose of No Man's Land its power and resonance is that it is fueled by both anger and yearning." The Boston Globe
Review:
"Gritty, animated, original, and disturbing, this allegorical tale of friendship and belonging is hard to put down. Recommended." Library Journal
Review:
"Although Trisha's initial musings on life are tediously mundane, as soon as Rose enters the picture, the novel takes off in a blur of speedy bliss. The novel shines with a kind of beatnik deference to drugs and lust and dangerous youth." Kirkus Reviews
Review:
"[C]ompellingly honest and told with a voice so pure that it would be ignominious to overlook it....This focused and authentic narrative voice is what makes Rose of No Man's Land such a sincere achievement..." San Francisco Chronicle
Review:
"Too much is predictable and too many characters are overly familiar. Nevertheless, flashes of brilliant writing and some scenes worthy of David Lynch remind readers of Tea's very considerable talent to shock and amuse." Booklist
Review:
"Rose's persona can seem over-the-top....But she nevertheless is convincing as one of those intense, powerfully magnetic people who can readily suck the more passive Trish into her powerful and potentially damaging orbit." BookReporter.com
Review:
"[I]mpossible to put down....Trisha is a raucous observer of everything from mall culture minutiae to her sister's reality TV dreams. Nothing gets by her." People Magazine
Synopsis:
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.
Synopsis:
"Rose of No Mans Land is both a riotously funny coming-of-age story and a poignant cautionary tale that smacks of there but for the grace of God heartbreak . . . Tea manages to balance Trishas snarky edge with moments of a sweetly sad, naive vulnerability that beautifully capture those mercurial midteen years."—The Boston Globe
Fourteen-year-old Trisha Driscoll is a gender-blurring, self-described loner whose family expects nothing of her. While her mother lies on the couch in a hypochondriac haze and her sister aspires to be on The Real World, Trisha struggles to find her own place among the neon signs, theme restaurants, and cookie-cutter chain stores of her hometown.
"Think Ghost World meets Catcher in the Rye with a little crank thrown in to keep it chugging along. We suggest you put it at the top of your list."—Daily Candy
"A literary Molotov cocktail that is equal parts My So-Called Life, Thelma & Louise, and Twin Peaks . . . Tea takes the reader on a harrowing journey that highlights how truly terrifying and exhilarating it is to be a teenager."—BUST Magazine
"A riotous coming-of-age novel do[es] for working-class teenage lesbians what S. E. Hintons Rumble Fish and The Outsiders did for greasers and street-brawling tough guys."—The New York Times Book Review
"What a miracle of a book."--BookForum
Michelle Tea lives in San Francisco, where she is beloved for her writing, her spoken word poetry, and her innovative arts organization that brought the world Sister Spit. Her published books include Rent Girl, The Chelsea Whistle, and Valencia.
Brie, November 12, 2008 (view all comments by Brie)
One night in the life of two teen anti-heroines as they learn about first love, disillusionment, crystal meth, and dinosaur-themed mini golf...Coming of age, coming out of the closet and, if you know what's good for you, coming soon to your bookshelf.
Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No (3 of 6 readers found this comment helpful)
crowyhead, October 23, 2007 (view all comments by crowyhead)
Trisha's life is not exactly thrilling. Her mother is a hypochrondriac on disability, and her father is a junkie and is rumored to be in Louisiana somewhere. The best thing that can be said for Donnie, her mother's boyfriend, is that he doesn't try to molest Trisha or her older sister, Kristy. Kristy's the only one who has any ambition -- and her main ambition is to get on MTV's "The Real World" by documenting how screwed up her family is. Trisha feels like she's ready for something -- anything! -- to happen, and when she meets Rose she gets her wish...
This is sort of a rough book to review without giving too much away. The first half had me laughing out loud and shaking my head at Trisha's attitude and the way that she describes the things around her; her narrative voice is fantastic. It's very similar to Tea's style in her other books, but Trisha does feel like her own character rather than a stand-in for Michelle Tea. The second half of this had me holding my breath hoping that nothing too terribly horrible was going to happen. I did really, really like it, though.
Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No (6 of 9 readers found this comment helpful)
Michelle Tea, a long-time favorite with streetwise memoir readers, proved she could pull off a novel with Rose of No Man's Land. It's like Freaks and Geeks with lesbians. Tea's writing dazzles and hurts in all the right places and her comic timing has never been better.
by Kevin Sampsell
"Publishers Weekly Review"
by Publishers Weekly,
"Tea follows up her Lambda Award — winning San Francisco prostitution memoir, Valencia (2000), her sporadically transcendent collected poems, The Beautiful (2003), and last year's graphic novel, Rent Girl (now in development for TV), with this inspired queer bildungsroman. In Trisha Driscoll, Tea has developed an unreliable narrator who stands on her own. Trisha is a doughy, alcoholic 10th-grade denizen of Mogsfield, Mass., a fictional white trash nowhere. Her father is long gone; her mother, owing to psychosomatic back problems, does not leave the couch; her mother's boyfriend, Donnie, enters the kitchen only to make ramen; her younger sister, Kristy, is obsessed with launching herself onto reality TV and constantly films the family dysfunctioning around her. The first half of the novel establishes Trisha's grim bedroom-to-mall despair. In the second, a new friend, Rose, a fry cook who looks 12 — appears, and the two go on a crystal meth — fueled adventure with blissful highs and crashing lows. Tea is brilliant in making the stakes for Trisha abundantly clear as she discovers sex (and, concurrently, her sexuality), drugs and the emotional gains and losses attendant to each. Add in minor characters like the never-seen but oft-discussed Kim Porciatti and various dumb guys in cars, and you have a postmillennial, class-adjusted My So-Called Life." Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
"Review"
by Entertainment Weekly,
"Rose is balls-out from the start....Tea's writing is raw, funny, and tragic, but never forced. Her memoirist's eye yields fiction that reads true. (Grade: A-)"
"Review"
by Lenora Todaro, The New York Times Book Review,
"A riotous coming-of-age novel about a misanthropic girl's sexual self-discovery...Tea is trying to do for working-class teenage lesbians what S. E. Hinton's Rumble Fish and The Outsiders did for greasers and street-brawling tough guys in the 1970s and '80s: to let them be heard and felt."
"Review"
by The Boston Globe,
"[B]oth a riotously funny coming-of-age story and a poignant cautionary tale that smacks of 'there but for the grace of God' heartbreak....What gives Rose of No Man's Land its power and resonance is that it is fueled by both anger and yearning."
"Review"
by Library Journal,
"Gritty, animated, original, and disturbing, this allegorical tale of friendship and belonging is hard to put down. Recommended."
"Review"
by Kirkus Reviews,
"Although Trisha's initial musings on life are tediously mundane, as soon as Rose enters the picture, the novel takes off in a blur of speedy bliss. The novel shines with a kind of beatnik deference to drugs and lust and dangerous youth."
"Review"
by San Francisco Chronicle,
"[C]ompellingly honest and told with a voice so pure that it would be ignominious to overlook it....This focused and authentic narrative voice is what makes Rose of No Man's Land such a sincere achievement..."
"Review"
by Booklist,
"Too much is predictable and too many characters are overly familiar. Nevertheless, flashes of brilliant writing and some scenes worthy of David Lynch remind readers of Tea's very considerable talent to shock and amuse."
"Review"
by BookReporter.com,
"Rose's persona can seem over-the-top....But she nevertheless is convincing as one of those intense, powerfully magnetic people who can readily suck the more passive Trish into her powerful and potentially damaging orbit."
"Review"
by People Magazine,
"[I]mpossible to put down....Trisha is a raucous observer of everything from mall culture minutiae to her sister's reality TV dreams. Nothing gets by her."
"Synopsis"
by Ingram,
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.
"Synopsis"
by Firebrand,
"Rose of No Mans Land is both a riotously funny coming-of-age story and a poignant cautionary tale that smacks of there but for the grace of God heartbreak . . . Tea manages to balance Trishas snarky edge with moments of a sweetly sad, naive vulnerability that beautifully capture those mercurial midteen years."—The Boston Globe
Fourteen-year-old Trisha Driscoll is a gender-blurring, self-described loner whose family expects nothing of her. While her mother lies on the couch in a hypochondriac haze and her sister aspires to be on The Real World, Trisha struggles to find her own place among the neon signs, theme restaurants, and cookie-cutter chain stores of her hometown.
"Think Ghost World meets Catcher in the Rye with a little crank thrown in to keep it chugging along. We suggest you put it at the top of your list."—Daily Candy
"A literary Molotov cocktail that is equal parts My So-Called Life, Thelma & Louise, and Twin Peaks . . . Tea takes the reader on a harrowing journey that highlights how truly terrifying and exhilarating it is to be a teenager."—BUST Magazine
"A riotous coming-of-age novel do[es] for working-class teenage lesbians what S. E. Hintons Rumble Fish and The Outsiders did for greasers and street-brawling tough guys."—The New York Times Book Review
"What a miracle of a book."--BookForum
Michelle Tea lives in San Francisco, where she is beloved for her writing, her spoken word poetry, and her innovative arts organization that brought the world Sister Spit. Her published books include Rent Girl, The Chelsea Whistle, and Valencia.
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