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Radiant Daughter

by Patricia Grossman

Radiant Daughter Cover

 

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

In Radiant Daughter, award-winning novelist Patricia Grossman follows a Czech-American family for twenty-seven years, beginning in suburban Chicago in 1969 and ending in Brooklyn, in seaside "Little Odessa," in 1996. Though the novel begins as a traditional assimilation story — immigrant parents, "native" children, and the conflicts one might expect — it evolves into a highly particular and harrowing tale surrounding the descent of Elise Blazek, the family’s brightest star. Radiant Daughter is also a story of translation — between generations, from the Czech of Irena and Stepan, to the "American" of the children, and finally to the Russian that is Elise’s academic specialty.

Review:

"Grossman (Brian in Three Seasons) pursues the erratic coming-of-age of the gifted daughter of a family of second-generation Czech immigrants living outside of Chicago. In 1969, 18-year-old Elise Blazek, scholarly and haughty, gets both accepted into Princeton and apprehended for vandalism, revealing a contradictory, troubled nature that confounds her pushy, ambitious mother, Irena. Elise can't wait to get out of her stifling suburban home where she also endures the distracted diffidence of her father, Stepan, a mild-mannered architecture draftsman, and younger cousin, Miloslav, a crack baseball pitcher dealing with his own tragedy. Over the course of 27 years, the novel traces Elise's gradual spiraling into mental illness and Irena's fixed denial: from Elise's decision to study Russian literature, grating her mother's hereditary resentment; her abrupt and unceremonious marriage to her Russian language graduate professor; diagnosis of manic depression manifested by episodes of hearing the voice of poet Anna Akhmatova; to dismissal from her university. Ultimately, Irena rallies around her daughter with a fierce maternal sympathy, offering a fragile closure to this unsentimental story of one family's gossamer dreams. (Aug.)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright PWyxz LLC)

About the Author

Patricia Grossman is the author of five previous novels. Brian in Three Seasons won the 2006 Ferro Grumley Award. She lives in Brooklyn, NY.

Product Details

ISBN:
9780810151994
Author:
Grossman, Patricia
Publisher:
Triquarterly Books
Subject:
General
Subject:
General Fiction
Subject:
Literature-A to Z
Edition Description:
Hardcover
Publication Date:
20100831
Binding:
HARDCOVER
Language:
English
Pages:
272
Dimensions:
9 x 6 in

Related Aisles

Radiant Daughter Used Hardcover
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$11.50 In Stock
Product details 272 pages Triquarterly Books - English 9780810151994 Reviews:
"Publishers Weekly Review" by , "Grossman (Brian in Three Seasons) pursues the erratic coming-of-age of the gifted daughter of a family of second-generation Czech immigrants living outside of Chicago. In 1969, 18-year-old Elise Blazek, scholarly and haughty, gets both accepted into Princeton and apprehended for vandalism, revealing a contradictory, troubled nature that confounds her pushy, ambitious mother, Irena. Elise can't wait to get out of her stifling suburban home where she also endures the distracted diffidence of her father, Stepan, a mild-mannered architecture draftsman, and younger cousin, Miloslav, a crack baseball pitcher dealing with his own tragedy. Over the course of 27 years, the novel traces Elise's gradual spiraling into mental illness and Irena's fixed denial: from Elise's decision to study Russian literature, grating her mother's hereditary resentment; her abrupt and unceremonious marriage to her Russian language graduate professor; diagnosis of manic depression manifested by episodes of hearing the voice of poet Anna Akhmatova; to dismissal from her university. Ultimately, Irena rallies around her daughter with a fierce maternal sympathy, offering a fragile closure to this unsentimental story of one family's gossamer dreams. (Aug.)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright PWyxz LLC)
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