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Hardcover Carousel of Progress Book

ISBN: 0375505377

ISBN13: 9780375505379

Carousel of Progress

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Meet Meredith Herman, a fourteen-year-old expert witness to the slow unraveling of her parents' marriage amid the lunacy of Los Angeles, 1978, a world of bell-bottoms, grapefruit diets, and plastic surgery. Meredith is a girl of a specific time and place tackling the universal challenges of boys, school, and parents. Her mother, Leigh, is a housewife suffering an excruciating and often hilarious midlife discontent, a malaise that leaves Meredith's...

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Fiction Literature & Fiction

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A female Holden, and more.

I'm always looking for a hip, current, female coming-of-age narrative to complement "Catcher in the Rye" in some of my classes. The most impressive story I've come across so far--Deborah Eisenberg's "What It Was Like, Seeing Chris"--is a bit sophisticated and elusive for younger readers to handle on their own. But "Carousel" is accessible as well as rewarding at the level of descriptive and metaphoric language (the carousel of the title, which refers to the old Disneyland ride, also symbolizes the narrator's leaving behind childish ways and even resonates with the carousel near the end of Holden's quest). Initially I gave the novel 4 stars. Impressive as it is, it's no match for a dazzling debut such as Donna Tartt's "The Secret History." But when I look at the lists of current best-sellers, when I read nothing but pages and pages of plodding plot summary from college-age students, and when I see a literary landscape increasingly cluttered with "fantasy" fiction, it's easy to develop a fuller appreciation for a literary talent like Tennant's.This is "authentic" imaginative literature. It's less about "captivating" (i.e. capturing) the reader's imagination than educating, or liberating, it. The author's narrative style leaves room for genuine "interpretation," for "making" as well as "receiving" meaning from the evocative patterns of imagery. Readers of "Carousel of Progress" are, like the novel's protagonist, challenged to abandon infantile carousels and cultivate, rather than surrender, their imaginations.For the attentive, creative reader the novel holds many rewards--the love/hate relationship between mother and daughter, the portrayal of a double rite-of-passage (mother's as well as daughter's), the touching brother-sister bond, and the tensions between the teen-age Meredith who is the subject of the narration and the considerably older Meredith who tells the story. Admittedly, the narration occasionally takes on a one-sided quality. More often than not, it is Meredith who plays parent to her childish, self-absorbed parents. And her account contains no small amount of male bashing, with Meredith's father being the first of a succession of male figures distinguished by their immaturity, egocentricity and flagrant disregard for the sensitive female protagonist. As a result, the climactic moment at which Meredith tells us she loves her father seemed "forced" to this reader--perhaps more reflective of the mature narrator than the 16-year-old who is the subject of her story.These minor reservations aside, "Carousel of Progress" is a promising debut and an engaging work of literature. Like Holden, Meredith has a real nose for what's phony as well as a creative capacity for fabricating various roles in her search for identity and belonging. The novel is full of Meredith's humorous snapshots of friends and family as well as explicit sexual description that reflects the importance of these matters in young people's lives without gratuitous explo

Love & Sex in the age of Farrah Fawcett and Sonny & Cher

Meredith Herman is coming of age in the seventies. All the signs are there: Lying in the sun to get a tan. Drinking Tab soda. Frosted hair. Watching Fantasy Island on TV when it wasn't reruns! Her mother is seeing a therapist, and begins to challenge her traditional role in the household--that of caretaker and martyr. Divorce is uncommon, and the sexual revolution is just getting out of the starting blocks as Meredith becomes aware of human relationships (including her parents' disintegrating marriage), real boys, and the possibilities of sex and love. An especially telling and poignant moment unfolds when Mrs. Herman responds to her daughter, "'Mom'...is that all I am to you?" In that question, you know her sense of entrapment and isolated anguish... and the inadequacy of a 14-year-old's ability to come up with an answer!Along with every teen who grew up in 1970s America, Meredith struggles constantly to become cool, and despairs of ever being beautiful or popular or even well-dressed. You love her courage and persistence as she renegotiates a relationship with her departing father, who has a horror of direct confrontation and tries to charm and joke everything into place instead; her younger brother, who is touching and sweet but also the annoying terror many of us recall from our childhoods; and not least of all, her mother, who in her mid-thirties rite of passage is evolving perhaps as quickly and as totally as Meredith herself.The feel of this book reminded me of Judy Blume's "Wifey," a book that many teens growing up in the seventies read in secret when their mothers weren't at home. You get a confidential look into a REAL (istic) teen's everyday thoughts and life events. I was absorbed in it from start to finish and will buy an extra copy to loan to friends-- it was that good!

Utterly believable - funny and touching

My wife suggested I read this book and on the grounds that the novel based on the musings of an LA teenager I was somewhat dubious. I am an english male in my 40's. I was wrong. This book is a joy. The characterisations are really superb and the book is as a result totally believable as well as being funny and touching.Katherine Tanney is a real talent

Great Coming of Age Novel

It's like reading the diary of a bright, funny, utterly candid teenager over several years of her family's breakup as she tests forbidden waters and plunges into young womanhood. Tanney has a sharp sense of time, place, and pace. The dialogue jumps out at you it's so real. You just want to step into this book and give that tough, sassy, sensitive girl a hug to keep her going. But she does it without you.

a new take on an old theme

This book covers ground you may recognize: teenage girl, living in Southern California, facing divorce and dysfunction. But it would be a real shame for it to get lost in the crowd, because Tanney crafts her narrator's voice so sharply that you cannot help but hang on her every word. Meredith Herman is fourteen, struggling to deal with a moody mother, a father who is a child himself, as well as finding her own way in a city and world where everything makes you have to grow up fast. Tanney's writing is fluid, funny, and at times heartbreakingly poignant. The only downside to this book is its title, which makes it sound like a textbook instead of the great read it is. Well worth the money and time.
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