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A Girl Becomes a Comma Like That: A Novel (2004)

di Lisa Glatt

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
1726158,196 (3.11)3
Hauntingly observant and insightful, this poignant debut novel delves into the intricate bonds between mothers and daughters and offers an unflinching, darkly funny look at the relationships between love, sex, and death.Rachel Spark is an irreverent, sexually eager, financially unstable thirty-year-old college instructor who moves back home when her mother is diagnosed with terminal breast cancer. As she tries to ease her mother, a perpetually cheerful woman, toward the inevitable, Rachel turns from one man to the next -- sometimes comically, sometimes catastrophically -- as if her own survival depended upon it."If I slept only with men who knew my full name, if I signed up for dance classes, if I ate more fruit -- even then there was no guarantee I'd get what I wanted," she thinks. And so she goes off with Johnny, who wears "all silk: black silk pants, a red silk shirt, even a silk band holding his hair in a ponytail." Or with Adam, an old boyfriend who remembers her with a bob she never had and tries to seduce her in his car with dark-tinted windows. Regardless of her unsuitable and unlikely bedmates, Rachel can't distract herself from what she knows about cancer -- that it disappears or returns, seemingly with a will of its own. But Rachel's not the only one struggling with the uncertain turns life takes...Ella Bloom, an adult student in Rachel's poetry class, aspires to more than her work at a local family planning clinic. But she spends her nights wondering why her husband kissed one of her colleagues and whether it will lead to a full-fledged affair, and she is also preoccupied with one of her repeat patients, Georgia, a teenager who frequents the clinic and has a story of her own. What they all have in common is their desire for love, despite its many obstacles.A Girl Becomes a Comma Like That is a novel rife with wit and compassion. A provocative, assured new voice in literary fiction, Lisa Glatt knows the yardsticks by which we constantly measure our world and ourselves -- devotion, lust, forgiveness, and courage.… (altro)
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" A girl becomes a comma like that, with wrong boy after wrong boy, she becomes a pause, something quick before the real thing." Its so true. This is a story about the struggles that women go through everyday, but Lisa Glatt found a way to make it funny. It's serious and hilarious at the same time. I bought this book because the title intrigued me and it didn't hurt that it was on the bargain shelf for $2. Its been years since I read it and it still stays in my top 3 favorite books. I think every woman should read it just once. ( )
  edenkal | May 28, 2009 |
This is a book that shows how vulnerable women are who are in emotional pain. Their sexuality is used as a cessation of the pain and an understanding of their places in life. The men they encounter are a means to an achievable end - they are not promiscuous, but trying to find a way to end the pain. Perhaps this is universally true and certainly worth examination. Rachel is a very moving character with the intelligence to know how self-destructive her behavior is and yet she is unable to stop it since it is a fleetiong anesthetic to the pain she endures anticipating her mother's death. Her mother's belief in breast reconstruction is indicative of her strength in the face of adversity. I am impressed by the way these characters are woven into the plot, and I found myself caring about all of them. ( )
  pdebolt | Jun 19, 2008 |
This book was a good read. It took me a few days to get through it but I enjoyed it. It is about a woman who has a mother who is dying of breast cancer. It has a lot of side characters who get their own sections of the story but Rachel, the main character was the most interesting. I didn't really think the other characters added too much to the story, especially with Angela, the best friend of Rachel who was a very minor character. But I liked the way this book was written. ( )
  WittyreaderLI | Jun 6, 2007 |
I also found this book somewhat hard to follow as the author jumped around between the interconnecting stories. As a book about relationships it did a pretty good job. ( )
  sarradee | Nov 8, 2006 |
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Hauntingly observant and insightful, this poignant debut novel delves into the intricate bonds between mothers and daughters and offers an unflinching, darkly funny look at the relationships between love, sex, and death.Rachel Spark is an irreverent, sexually eager, financially unstable thirty-year-old college instructor who moves back home when her mother is diagnosed with terminal breast cancer. As she tries to ease her mother, a perpetually cheerful woman, toward the inevitable, Rachel turns from one man to the next -- sometimes comically, sometimes catastrophically -- as if her own survival depended upon it."If I slept only with men who knew my full name, if I signed up for dance classes, if I ate more fruit -- even then there was no guarantee I'd get what I wanted," she thinks. And so she goes off with Johnny, who wears "all silk: black silk pants, a red silk shirt, even a silk band holding his hair in a ponytail." Or with Adam, an old boyfriend who remembers her with a bob she never had and tries to seduce her in his car with dark-tinted windows. Regardless of her unsuitable and unlikely bedmates, Rachel can't distract herself from what she knows about cancer -- that it disappears or returns, seemingly with a will of its own. But Rachel's not the only one struggling with the uncertain turns life takes...Ella Bloom, an adult student in Rachel's poetry class, aspires to more than her work at a local family planning clinic. But she spends her nights wondering why her husband kissed one of her colleagues and whether it will lead to a full-fledged affair, and she is also preoccupied with one of her repeat patients, Georgia, a teenager who frequents the clinic and has a story of her own. What they all have in common is their desire for love, despite its many obstacles.A Girl Becomes a Comma Like That is a novel rife with wit and compassion. A provocative, assured new voice in literary fiction, Lisa Glatt knows the yardsticks by which we constantly measure our world and ourselves -- devotion, lust, forgiveness, and courage.

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