Annie on My Mind, by Nancy Garden (review)
Posted: 2012/01/30 Filed under: Literature | Tags: annie on my mind, lesbian fiction, nancy garden, review, young adult 1 Comment »When I confessed to Jade that I had never read any F/F romance, I guess she must have felt sorry for me, for the next thing she did was send me a PDF copy of Annie on My Mind. Of course it took me over a year before I actually got around to reading. But woman, was it worth the wait!
Liza, now a freshman at MIT, remembers what happened during her high school senior year. It all starts with a girl… Annie. They meet inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where Liza searches inspiration for her project, and Annie sings aimlessly. Besides being both seventeen, and not relating easily to other people their age, the girls have little in common. Liza is from Brooklyn Heights, where she attends a private school in which she has been elected president of the student body. Annie, of Italian descent, lives in a shabby neighbourhood with her parents and grandma, and goes to a public school. Liza wants to become an architect, Annie, a singer. Yet opposites attract, and they soon form a deep friendship… or one might as well call it love.
A big part of the novel is taken up by Liza’s troubles at school, which start when she fails to report one of her classmates for piercing ears in the lavatory. Apparently random and meaningless, the incident snowballs in the context of Foster Academy’s financial difficulties. In order to raise money as well as attract new students, the school must indeed present a pristine image. The student body president’s conduct especially cannot be anything less than irreproachable… I think you see where this is heading.
Annie on My Mind certainly deserves to be called in equal part young adult, romance, and lesbian fiction. The way the three are interwoven within one plot may in fact be this novel’s greatest achievement. In Liza and Annie’s story, their being high school students, their being in love and their being lesbians cannot be separated. Things happen the way they happen exactly because they are all three things at once. Better yet: each of these three facts is admirably portrayed. Being in trouble with the high school hierarchy as a good student? Been there. Liza’s experience perfectly conveys the alienation one feels as a teenager, regardless of one’s sexual orientation.

We didn’t really talk much about being gay; most of the time we just talked about ourselves.
We were what seemed important then, not some label. The day the first snow fell was a Saturday and Annie and I called each other up at exactly the same moment, over and over again, tying our phones with busy signals for ten minutes. I don’t remember which of us got through first, but around an hour later we were both running through Central Park like a couple of maniacs, making snow angels and pelting each other with snowballs.
- Annie on My Mind, Nancy Garden (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1982)
Parts of the book (and maybe you could add, the whole story) sounded a little like The Homosexual Experience 101. By which I mean, things are described exactly the way such things are usually and typically described, not in fiction, but in general whenever we’re talking about homosexuality. But then, why wouldn’t they be? These “typical descriptions” must come from somewhere, and in this respect Ms. Garden’s novel offers an engaging greater picture for all these elements to fit in. Although I’ve read it a dozen times, seeing it within the context of the full story sheds a decidedly fresh light on the matter.
That was the worst thing, another thing I’m never going to be able to forget even though I want to. It was as if everyone were assuming that love had nothing to do with any of this, that it was just “an indulgence of carnal appetites”―I think Ms. Baxter actually used those words.
- Annie on My Mind, Nancy Garden (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1982)
Also, the feeling of repetition (which possibly wasn’t there when the novel was first published, in 1982) may be said to carry a meaning of its own. In the last part, Annie on My Mind becomes the story of how genuine love between two persons can be turned into a caricature by others; how the two only protagonists in that love story are robbed of their agency, how the meaning of their own love is taken away from them. As everybody else jumps in to appropriate their private life, their relationship ceases to be what they make of it. It becomes a case. Garden shows all the nuances in the many reactions Liza and Annie have to face, yet they seem to have one thing in common: misunderstanding.
“There was one night when June and I slept in the same bed. At her house, it was. And we―we kissed each other. And then for a while we pretended one of us was a boy―until it got so―so silly and we got so giggly we stopped. Honey, lots of girls do that kind of thing. Boys, too. Maybe boys more than girls. It doesn’t mean anything unless―well, I don’t suppose I have to draw any pictures, you’re nearly grown up.”
- Annie on My Mind, Nancy Garden (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1982)
Just read that last line twice and tell me if there is a clearer way to express both the invisibilisation of lesbian sex, and the o so erroneous belief that sex is an only-physical urge/act (a belief which directly implies another mistake: that love is a platonic emotion). As a heterosexual―by which I don’t mean to emphasize that my experience is different, as much as that it belongs to the dominant/default discourse―I would lie if I said that this book hasn’t opened up a few more blind spots in my understanding of the gay experience. I cried, too. Maybe everyone needs a Homosexuality 101 course. I know I really want to recommend this book to every person who hasn’t had the chance to read it yet… Any more F/F romance recs, Jade?
Are you familiar with lesbian fiction? Homosexual romance? What do you like (or dislike) about it? Any personal thoughts on Annie on My Mind?
Final Friends Book 3: The Graduation, by Christopher Pike (review)
Posted: 2011/08/22 Filed under: Literature, Music | Tags: christopher pike, crime, final friends, mystery, review, the beatles, whodunit, young adult Leave a comment »I have previously reviewed the Book 1 and Book 2.
So here’s the conclusion at last. In that respect, The Graduation felt more pulled-together than the last part. Pike explains the leap from the homecoming dance straight to the graduation ceremony by giving most of his characters reasons to have gone away; and isn’t it the least he could do after two tragedies hit this group of Tabb High seniors? Following through as if nothing had happened is what would have been suspicious. At any case, the end of the year has finally come. With it the final friends will meet again for one last time, one last occasion to sort out the puzzle of the two “accidents” that happened.
One of the problems with people thinking you’re smart is you eventually begin to believe it. I remember all the times in class―how restless I would be for the teacher to get on with the lesson. I’ve grasped the concept, I used to think, why haven’t the rest of the kids? What I didn’t realize then is that learning something doesn’t just mean figuring it out. It’s also the pleasure you get from the knowledge. I didn’t appreciate that the teacher would sometimes dwell on a particular subject because he or she loved it. I got mostly A’s but now I wish I’d had more fun doing it.
- Final Friends Book 3: The Graduation, Christopher Pike (Pocket Books, 1989)
Pike’s foray into YA proves wrong so many things I keep hearing about writing from people who have never even been published. How you can’t make a compelling heroine out of a typical wealthy, pretty girl. How you can’t make multidimensional characters based on stereotypes. How you can’t save every character’s life without going overboard with the HEA, etc. Characterization in Final Friends is amazing; the author knows how to play with teenagers’ perceptions of each other, reputations, expectations and secret weaknesses. He manages to make us fall for characters we have all reasons to dislike. Jessica, who would be perfect if she was a little less vain and superficial. Sara, who would be nice if she was less hysterical and bossy. Bubba, who would be fun if he was more transparent. Bill, who would be attractive if he was less boring.
Her mouth was a wonder, so soft and warm, tasting like―well, she tasted like toothpaste, which was fine with him. From now on, he knew, whenever he brushed his teeth, he would remember this moment.
- Final Friends Book 3: The Graduation, Christopher Pike (Pocket Books, 1989)
The end was both surprising enough and fully satisfying. Final Friends is very much in line with a book such as Weekend, just pure YA. They’re great if you like romance; they all get married in the end, or so we’re led to believe. Is that realistic? Who cares? I certainly didn’t when I closed the book. I just felt fine. Mighty fine. And I wanted to listen to the Beatles. I don’t know if it’s supposed to mean that Christopher Pike is a fan, but there was already talk of a Beatles song (Blackbird) in Weekend. In The Graduation, Jessica sings Let it Be at the graduation ceremony:
Do you remember Beatles references in other books of Pike’s? Do you agree with the fact that archetypal characters are harder to write than all-out grey ones? Or that high school love is harder to portray than adult love? Do you think Pike masters it?
Final Friends Book 2: The Dance, by Christopher Pike (review)
Posted: 2011/07/11 Filed under: Literature | Tags: christopher pike, crime, final friends, mystery, review, whodunit, writing tip, young adult 1 Comment »
It would probably make more sense if I’d written a single review for the three Final Friends books, seeing as they’re real sequels, not just related novels. Unfortunately for me (since it’s a suspenseful crime story), I’ve only managed to come by them one by one, and I tend to review as I read, so there you go…
God, I need the third book. If you’ve got it and are willing to send it my way, I’ll gladly give you one of my books in return! The thing is, as you can probably guess, The Dance only takes us deeper into the mystery, scattering possible hints and raising the stakes, without offering any actual answer or certainty. In other words, it builds momentum for the third book’s final big revelation.
This is efficiently done, but not excruciatingly so, either. There is a healthy dose of high school drama to relax the atmosphere, so that somewhere between a death/murder and a near-deadly accident/murder attempt, we almost forget that there might be a killer lurking out there. Instead we get caught up into the competition for homecoming queen, SAT exams, basketball practice and first kisses. More cheese, you might think… In a way, yes, and for our greatest enjoyment; in another, not so much. I was surprised to find several instances of the author’s sharply critical distance from his characters’ all-American occupations and concerns.
[...] Jessica again searched the stands for Michael. She thought he probably wouldn’t attend the dance―he had never struck her as the type that went in for big phony gettogethers―but Nick was his friend, he should have come to the game.
- Final Friends Book 2: The Dance, Christopher Pike (Pocket Books, 1988)
Other interesting elements in The Dance, in my opinion, include astronomy and basketball scenes. Which goes to show that even light, entertainment fiction targeted at teenagers can benefit from those little bits of extra knowledge (aka trivia) that make a story realistic and rich. No, you don’t want to lose your readers into the full details of something too specific, but you should, when you’re writing a novel, take the time to explain things that go beyond mere character interaction. Few things annoy me more in amateur fiction than a character described as a basketball player who never plays basketball, or a supposedly straight-A student who hardly ever seems to give any thought to homework and school.
To the inexperienced eye, the wisp of light in the center of the field of view of Michael’s telescope would not have looked significant. Because it was so far from the sun, the comet’s frozen nucleus had no tail to set it apart from the star field. It was its position―its changing position relative to the unchanging stars―that had initially caught Michael’s attention.
- Final Friends Book 2: The Dance, Christopher Pike (Pocket Books, 1988)
Do you like “well-rounded” or in-between-genres novels, or would you rather read a mystery that’s truly mysterious, horror that’s truly horrific, comedy that’s truly comical, etc.? Do you agree with my writing tip? Should authors develop elements that don’t add anything to the plot, but much to their story’s credibility and substance?
Final Friends Book 1: The Party, by Christopher Pike (review)
Posted: 2011/05/19 Filed under: Bio, Literature | Tags: christopher pike, crime, final friends, mystery, review, whodunit, young adult 5 Comments »
Since I’m not really in the mood for an Opinion Blog, I’ll post the review I’ve promised in my last entry: The Party, first book of Christopher Pike’s Final Friends trilogy. Christopher Pike is a children’s books and young adult author I used to read when I was a pre-teen and young teenager. I read him now out of nostalgia, but also out of genuine interest; because he’s still a reference in the YA/crime/paranormal genres for me. And if not romance, then that’s the kind of novels I’d like to write.
The whole country was in love with phonies, she felt. The bimboes on sitcoms, the rock dopers on MTV, the rich liars in D.C. It made her sick just going into the supermarket and having to look at all those fakes on the covers of People magazine. One day she’d like to start a magazine of her own where she could interview people like herself, people who knew it was all a big joke.
- Final Friends Book 1: The Party, Christopher Pike (Pocket Books, 1988)
Moreover, it’s interesting to note that my obsession with writing about love and relationships greatly developed through reading Pike. I think I have already mentioned my late discovery of modern romance (I was already in my twenties). Before that, of course there had been Jane Austen, and the Brontë sisters, and Charles Dickens, but as far as contemporary stories went, there had mostly been Pike. I already wrote a review for his novel Weekend: for those who can read French, it was published in the e-zine Les Romantiques on page 43.
So, in each of Pike’s YA novels, there is a love story. And not just a love story, but general talk of couples, attraction, sex, breakups, jealousy and betrayals. This is something I appreciate, not only in my romance reader’s quality, but from a purely realistic perspective. You remember how it really was in high school. Everybody was busy having a crush on someone, trying to go out with them, or gossiping about who had sex with who, and the popular guy or girl’s latest conquest. I’m not judging whether this is superficial or immature, just stating that this is the way it was. One major reason why J. K. Rowling totally lost me when Harry Potter grew up and remained desperately virginal and ignorant. (Teenagers watch porn. They talk about sex and tell sex jokes all the time. All the time.)
“I’ve been in there a couple of times. I never saw you. Is it a part-time job?”
“Fifty hours a week.”
“Wow.” He lived in a different world, she realized. He made money, carried his own weight. She charged everything, ran up the phone bill. And from what he said, he watched out for his mom, when all she did was fight with her parents about nothing. She lived such a superficial life.
But what can I do? I’m already spoiled.
- Final Friends Book 1: The Party, Christopher Pike (Pocket Books, 1988)
Mr. Pike shows all that, but with a subtlety, good sense and humour which prevents him from lapsing in either a condemnation or an apologia. While reading Final Friends, I was impressed once more at his ability to grasp and paint seventeen-year-olds’ feelings and concerns. While each of his many characters seem to fit in a different stereotypical category (the shy geek, the nice pretty girl, the cheerleader, the good-looking jock, the artist, the chubby sister, the sarcastic best friend, etc.), as the plot thickens all of them lose their apparent unidimensionality. Behind and besides their universal hope of getting laid, more serious and touchy subjects arise.
“You and your parents are illegal aliens, aren’t you?”
She trembled, ever so slightly. “Yes,” she whispered.
“There were a lot in my old neighborhood. [...] What’s the big crime? They’ve loosened the laws. Stay here a few years and they’ll make you a citizen.”
“That’s not how it works. We got here after the amnesty deadline. In Washington there’s talk about changing the requirements, but until then we could be sent home anytime.”
- Final Friends Book 1: The Party, Christopher Pike (Pocket Books, 1988)
Now, because I’ve read many other Christopher Pike YA novels, from the start I could see similarities with his other works. Or maybe I expected them. In the end, I found myself surprised at the ways the story unfolded, lost in the layers the author kept adding, which were as many possible clues and red herrings. I still managed to guess right at the victim’s identity, but as for the culprit, Pike’s left us in proper darkness. I suspect him of pulling a paranormal trick on us, although The Party was completely free of supernatural. In fact, this first book ends in an absolutely classical, delightful mystery novel atmosphere, with the main male character drawing a map of the house where the crime was committed, and reviewing the people present with the police lieutenant. Maybe my favourite part of the book, which made me long for more good crime novels… and even more for the two next Final Friends books, The Dance and The Graduation. I hadn’t experienced such suspense in a while.
Do you still read the books you used to like as a child or a teenager? Do you have any mystery novel recommendation for my readers and myself? Do you more easily relate to puritan teenagers or sex-obsessed ones?*
* Pike’s main characters are always romantic and decent kids, though. Just… red-blooded too.
New story up!
Posted: 2011/03/04 Filed under: My writing | Tags: short story, young adult Leave a comment »I’ve finished a Romance/Young Adult short story. You can read it on FictionPress by clicking here.
Summary: High school romance. “This isn’t a stereotypical case of falling-for-your-friend scenario, though. At least not for Karen. From the first look she got at Jake, she crushed on him. Hard. This is more like a stereotypical case of unrequited first love.”
Writer’s note: I wanted to illustrate the importance of friendship in a romantic relationship. I believe there cannot be true love without friendship, and that if more couples were best friends first of and after all, there would be less breakups, at least less painful and harmful ones.
You’re welcome to discuss the story both here and on FictionPress. I thrive on comments, including (constructive) criticism!
It’s 25° F in Montreal and I long for spring…







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