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Paperback St. Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves: Stories Book

ISBN: 0307276678

ISBN13: 9780307276674

St. Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves: Stories

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good*

*Best Available: (ex-library)

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Book Overview

Here is the debut short story collection from the author of the Pulitzer Prize finalist Swamplandia and the New York Times bestselling Vampires in the Lemon Grove.

In these ten glittering stories, the award-winning, bestselling author Orange World and Other Stories takes us to the ghostly and magical swamps of the Florida Everglades. Here wolf-like girls are reformed by nuns, a family makes their living...

Customer Reviews

7 ratings

eerie short stories

I liked this book. The short stories in the beginning and end were my favorites. The ones in the middle were a bit harder to follow for me personally. The stories were eerie, and I could picture these mysterious beaches and forests as I read. I also read "Vampires In Lemon Grove" by Karen Russel, and I preferred that one.

Lovely to read with other people!

I read one of the stories aloud with my boyfriend and it was wonderful; the edges of the pages also look vintage and aged which is nice.

all that, a bag of chips, and some dipping sauce!!!

These stories touched me. Karen Russell took me away from the ordinary. and these stories are not ordinary, nor should they be compared to the everyday. I noticed some reviewers before me seemed somewhat critical of the 'lack of resolution'. I see it very differently- i compare her stories to my dreams. I usually wake up before they end, and LOVE them even more because of that. Don't expect something ordinary with these stories, expect to be taken to a fantastically brilliant and gloomy dream!

Wow.

Karen Russell, St. Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves (Knopf, 2006) I was reading along in Karen Russell's debut volume of short stories, St. Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves, and I was pretty sure it was going to get an excellent review. I figured it would flirt with inclusion in my Best Reads of 2007 list. Then I read "Out to Sea." Not only is this book a shoo-in for the Best List-- a pretty amazing feat for a book I read in the first two weeks of the year-- but I'm reasonably confident in saying it's got a shot at the overall title, and I can say with great confidence that Karen Russell made a devoted lifelong fan with that story, a masterpiece of emotional wordplay and controlled eroticism. (The story that follows it, "Accident Brief, #00/422," takes the exact opposite tack to the same basic destination, giving us a laugh-out-loud funny narrator who injects moments of such hopeless despair that the reader will find himself stopping laughing, instantly and uncomfortably, on an alarmingly regular basis.) Ben Marcus, in one of the blurbs on the back cover, says "This book is a miracle.", and I am inclined to agree with him. It would be easy, if a touch simplistic, to pigeonhole Russell's stories in the magical realism genre. All the hallmarks are there-- normal (well, kind of) people, real (or at least plausible) places, supernatural (or are they, really?) events. So, yeah. Lots of qualifiers there. Borges/Marquez/Murakami/Hoffman/et al. would recognize Russell on sight, but less as a daughter than as a second cousin once removed. The same could be said of any genre where one might fit Russell's work; it seems to be a new beast all its own. Genre, however, is not as important as skill, and Russell is an immensely skilled writer. It's a good thing to be able to write solid characters and put them into interesting situations. If you can do that, in general, you've got yourself a workable book. After that, everything else is what separates the good from the great: the eye for minuscule detail, the ability to recognize that one turn of phrase will ring marginally better than another against the resonance of the rest of the story's language, a talent for developing one's characters in surprising, yet plausible (within the framework of the story, anyway) ways. When you're reading a Karen Russell story, it becomes very quickly obvious that you're in the hands of a master. If you have not yet picked this up, do so at your earliest convenience; it is that rarest of beasts, a book that actually lives up to all the pre-publication buzz. *****

A delight to come across

I have been going through a bit of a short story phase this year, and I could not have been more thrilled to come across this book. The stories are wildly entertaining, imaginative, and moving. There is something in this book for everyone. I found myself going back again and again to pick up details that I missed. For a first time author, Karen Russell sets the bar high for future collections of tales. I for one cannot wait to read whatever else she has in store for us. Ms. Russell, your fans are out here, and they grow in number with every person I give this book too.

terrific debut

As a lover of short stories, I feel like I have to weigh in on this book, which was one of my very favorite reads of 2006. Russell's tales are inventive, funny, and deeply moving. A must read for any fan of the short form.

ten delightful fables

These are ten delightful fables that star young heroes and heroines living in an offbeat magical Florida Everglades. The irony behind the uplifting tales is that they involve growing up to face reality yet still retain the magical environs of childhood while on the verge of losing their youthful enthusiasm forever. Each contribution is haunting (not just Olivia's tale) and satirical as Karen Russell brings out the inspirational "I won't Grow Up" from Peter Pan while having to pretend to have grown up; albeit what are girls who just want to have fun raised by wolves but now left with nuns to do except to fake assimilation. Whether one searches for a dead sister using enchanted goggles or has a Minatare as a dad, ST. LUCY'S HOME FOR GIRLS RAISED BY WOLVES: AND OTHER STORIES is a fun compilation that cleverly lampoons adult solutions to children's problems by sending them to their room in this case a camp for troubled sleepers. Harriet Klausner
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