Your cart is currently empty!
In the seemingly endless small-town summer of 1968, a twelve-year-old girl contemplates with dread the social prospects of her fast-approaching enrollment in a class for gifted students at the local high school, arranged by her mother who “blows up” at the drop of a hat—she doesn’t intend to let her daughter marry “the first man to come along,” and she is prepared to do anything to make sure her children don’t grow up “ignorant,” like Judith’s sister, Claire. To escape her mother’s unpredictable and interminable rants, the young girl locks herself in her room with her books, escaping into a life of imagination and dreams, mostly of older guys like Marius, as beautiful as a god when he dons his softball uniform every Wednesday to play in the community park, and to whom she writes anonymous love letters.
Fortunately, there’s the prettiest girl in town to look up to. Recruited by the pop music band Bruce and the Sultans as their go-go dancer, if her audition in the big city of Montreal goes well, Claire is to accompany the band on their upcoming provincial tour. Idolized by the story’s unnamed narrator, Claire is the “big sister” she never had, but whom she shares by proxy with her best friend, Judith.
In this, her fifth book, Lise Tremblay paints a picture of rural Quebec in the years following the Quiet Revolution in her signature style so refreshingly free of artifice and literary hyperbole. Society is changing fast, new values are making inroads, but old traditions remain deeply rooted. Judith’s Sister is a coming-of-age novel that focuses on the timeless themes that preoccupy all adolescent girls: solitude, alienation, obesity, lies, sexuality, shame, madness and fear of strangers; and our inevitable first encounters with the grown-up betrayals of friends, family and community.
“Never has Lise Tremblay’s writing been so sober, minimalist or refined. And never more real. Never has her lucid, ironic view of the world she explores from one book to the next felt more authentic.” —Danielle Laurin, Le Devoir
“Of course, literature is the goal of all writers. Few achieve it without stylistic tricks and even fewer, with the economy of words and metaphor found in this novel by Lise Tremblay.” —Pierre Foglia, La Presse
160 Pages
8.5in * 216mm * 5.5in * 140mm * 0.375in10mm
184gr
6.5oz
November 15, 2011
Vancouver
CA
9780889226777
9780889229648 – EPUB
9780889227323 – EPUB
9781772010930 – Kindle
9781772010244 – EPUB
9780889227606 – EPUB
9781772010947 – PDF
9781772014464 – EPUB
9780889228184 – EPUB
9780889228016 – EPUB
9780889229594 – EPUB
9780889228207 – EPUB
9780889228993 – EPUB
9781772010923 – Kindle
eng
No author posts found.