Synopses & Reviews
"If I could write just a single story as beautiful and heartbreaking and intelligent as the thirteen linked together in Drift, I'm pretty sure that I could die a happy man. Victoria Patterson makes me envious as hell, and I applaud her for it." --Donald Ray Pollock, author of Knockemstiff
Welcome to Newport Beach, California--a community often found glittering in the spotlight, but one that isn't always as glamorous as we imagine. Through the lives of waiters and waitresses, divorced and single parents, and alienated teens, Victoria Patterson's Drift offers a rare and rewarding view into the real life of this nearly mythical place, all the while plumbing the depths of female friendship and what it means to be an outsider. Fresh, energetic, deceptively powerful and delightfully frank, hers is a voice you won't be able to stop reading.
"Drift is one of the truest depictions of Southern California I've read yet. Amidst the rampant materialism and manicured malls of Newport Beach, Patterson depicts characters simultaneously at odds with, and in sync with, the cultural void around them. This work is subtle, honest, and a great pleasure to read." --Danzy Senna, author of Caucasia
"Victoria Patterson has enormous talent." --James Lee Burke, author of Purple Cane Road
Victoria Patterson grew up in Newport Beach and received her MFA from UC Riverside. Her award-winning short fiction has appeared in the Santa Monica Review, Florida Review, and Snake-Nation Review, among other publications. She lives with her family in South Pasadena, California.
Review
"If I could write just a single story as beautiful and heartbreaking and intelligent as the thirteen linked together in
Drift, I'm pretty sure that I could die a happy man. Victoria Patterson makes me envious as hell, and I applaud her for it."
Review
Victoria Pattersons beautiful stories break our hearts as they inform us. Through her characters we see the complications and trauma of not fitting in with ones surroundings, in a version of California we are rarely allowed to see. Haunting, affirming, and often comic, her stories make the reader grateful for this writers documentation of our human alienation—and our unexpected bonds. Patterson is a gifted storyteller, a fresh, essential new voice. — Dana Johnson, author of Break Any Woman Down
Review
"Victoria Patterson has enormous talent and I suspect we'll be hearing a lot more from her."
Review
"Set against the affluence of Newport Beach, Pattersons debut collection often focuses on the enclaves outcasts—waitstaff, divorcées, alcoholics, and drug addicts—as her characters confront personal battles, the limits of friendship, and the bleary anticipation of a different life. Pattersons 13 engaging tales offer keen perspectives on life lived on the fringe."
Review
"Patterson's unflinching account of the seedy side of a real-life Xanadu is frightening, immersive, and wonderfully realized."
Review
Victoria Pattersons beautiful stories br Dana Johnson
Review
Victoria Patterson's Newport Beach is a privileged world of wealth and heedless consumption that trails a wake of human damage. By giving us nuanced portraits of the sidelined, she somehow evokes the complex, glittering whole. Patterson is our generation's heir to John O'Hara and Edith Wharton. And nobody else writes about female sexuality with such sensitivity and fearlessness. Several times, I had to put this book down just to catch my breath. —Michelle Huneven, author of Jamesland and Round Rock
Review
"Patterson’s unflinching account of the seedy side of a real-life Xanadu is frightening, immersive and wonderfully realized."
- Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Set against the affluence of Newport Beach, Patterson’s debut collection often focuses on the enclaves’ outcasts—waitstaff, divorcées, alcoholics, and drug addicts—as her characters confront personal battles, the limits of friendship, and the bleary anticipation of a different life. Patterson’s 13 engaging tales offer keen perspectives on life lived on the fringe."
- Booklist
"If I could write just a single story as beautiful and heartbreaking and intelligent as the thirteen linked together in Drift, I'm pretty sure that I could die a happy man. Victoria Patterson makes me envious as hell, and I applaud her for it."
-Donald Ray Pollock, author of Knockemstiff
"Victoria Patterson has enormous talent and I suspect we'll be hearing a lot more from her."
- James Lee Burke, author of Purple Cane Road
"Drift is one of the truest depictions of Southern California I've read yet. Set fifty miles south of Los Angeles, amidst the rampant materialism and manicured malls of Newport Beach, Patterson depicts characters simultaneously at odds with, and in sync with, the cultural void around them. This work is subtle, honest, and a great pleasure to read."
- Danzy Senna, author of Caucasia
“Patterson is our generation’s heir to John O’Hara and Edith Wharton. Several times I had to put this book down just to catch my breath.”
- Michelle Huneven, author of Jamesland
“Victoria Patterson’s beautiful stories break our hearts as they inform us. Through her characters we see the complications and trauma of not fitting into one’s surroundings, in a version of California we are rarely allowed to see. Haunting, affirming, and often comic, her stories make the reader grateful for this writer’s documentation of our human alienation -- and our unexpected bonds. A gifted storyteller, a fresh, essential new voice."
- Dana Johnson, author of Break Any Woman Down
Review
Victoria Patterson’s beautiful stories br --Michelle Huneven
Synopsis
Welcome to Newport Beach, California--a community often found glittering in the spotlight, but one that isn't always as glamorous as we imagine. Through the lives of waiters and waitresses, divorced and single parents, and alienated teens, Victoria Patterson's Drift offers a rare and rewarding view into the real life of this nearly mythical place, all the while plumbing the depths of female friendship and what it means to be an outsider. Fresh, energetic, deceptively powerful and delightfully frank, hers is a voice you won't be able to stop reading.
Synopsis
From a fresh new Southern California voice comes this wise and intimate debut collection that offers a fascinating glimpse of exclusive Newport Beach through the lives of the waiters and waitresses, divorced and single parents, and alienated teens who all, in some way, find themselves on the outside looking in. "Henrys House" introduces us to Melody and Katharine, single mothers who raised their daughters togetheruntil Melody marries for money, sacrificing herself so that her mother and Katharine can enjoy the luxuries her beauty has earned them all. "Remoras" probes the transformative friendship between John, a waiter of ambiguous sexual proclivities, and Annette, the restaurants hostess, who has promised herself to a fellow Armenian. And then theres Rosie, whose evolution from a lonely child of divorce to precocious teenager, alcoholic college student, and eventual career waitress provides heartbreaking punctuation to this linked collection. Deceptively powerful and refreshingly frank, Pattersons storieslike those of ZZ Packer, Julie Orringer, and Nell Freudenbergerplumb the depths of female friendship and what it means to be an outsider, all while offering a rare and rewarding glimpse inside affluent Newport Beach.
About the Author
VICTORIA PATTERSON grew up in Newport Beach and received her MFA from UC Riverside. Her award-winning short fiction has appeared in the Santa Monica Review, the Florida Review, and Snake-Nation Review, among other publications. She lives with her family in South Pasadena, California.