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Paperback An Empty Room Book

ISBN: 0156032813

ISBN13: 9780156032810

An Empty Room

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Unlike typical coming-of-age novels, An Empty Room looks at youthful cynicism and narcissism seriously. Twenty-seven-year-old Talitha Stevenson does not patronize the emotional lives of her characters... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Fiction Literature & Fiction

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

"Whose job is it to protect the inncent?"

Emily is nineteen, attracted to Tom, son of her parent's acquaintances, Andrea and Tony Raine. While the Raine's file for divorce, Tom's married cousin, Simon, and his wife, Rachel, live with Andrea temporarily to help her prepare for the single life, her residence across the street from Emily's house. On the cusp of womanhood, Emily's attraction to Tom is mostly external, based on his striking handsomeness, their endless evenings of dancing, drinking and drugs a shadow romance. Emily isn't ready for commitment or love, content to drift along in a shallow, if physically satisfying relationship. Whenever Tom manifests any complications, Emily chooses ignorance, unwilling to invest emotionally, carefully aloof. This is the summer before college, the ending of one part of her life, not quite the beginning of another: "I helped myself to all the power of being loved, withy none of the cost to myself." Emily's parents coexist in a constant state of tension; her father keeps his clothing in the bedroom closet, but sleeps in the guest room, husband and wife's conversations threaded with sarcasm. In contrast, Tom's mother is brittle and angry, her bitterness infecting everyone around her. Suddenly, Emily finds herself longing for intimacy, tired of her parent's stoicism and put off by Andrea's tragic self-indulgence. Emily's social life has always revolved around a clique of club kids, "a them and us fiction... all it was in reality was the possession of Class A and B drugs". When Emily begins a clandestine affair with Simon, her attention is focused on him and she still believes the world will bend to her wishes. This young woman's moral quandary is resolved, if not to her liking, shaped more by reality than fantasy, an indelible lesson: "Blame... is there waiting in your own mind, when you are ready to read it". But Emily's revival from the dark well of her own ego is tainted by the cost to others, an egocentric girl who has avoided reality, seeking comfort in isolation and passivity. The romance awakens this Sleeping Beauty from a long summer of self, but the affair is rendered almost incidental to her newly realized emotional maturity. Stevenson has a particular knack for the young, hip English dialog, in this case, Emily's ongoing inner commentary as she is swept into her love affair with a married man that erases all her boundaries. This deceptively simple story excises the frail pretensions of youth, finally betrayed by the human flaws that determine our commitments and the consequences of our actions. Emily's coming-of-age is fraught with pain, but significant and impressive, her passport into a more effective adulthood. Stevenson should not be underestimated, her prose both incisive and insightful, diving below the surface of facile relationships to expose fears, denials and shattered dreams. Luan Gaines/2005.

How Do You Define Love?

How do you define love? This question and other heady topics form the foundation for Stevenson's debut novel. Stevenson's characters are well rendered, with both their internal emotional lives and their relationships to each other masterly crafted. Stevenson doesn't show pity for her characters. She is honest with their emotions; she tells the truth. On the surface, AN EMPTY ROOM is about a 19-year-old narrator and how she leaves a sinking relationship with her dead-end boyfriend to enter an affair with her ex-boyfriend's married cousin. Every parent in the novel is either divorced or in a stale marriage; they are all plagued with previous infidelity. This fact weighs heavy with the narrator as she struggles with the hypocrisy of her own affair and the family histories all around her. Stevenson nicely weaves these emotional issues, which form the foundation of the book, with the exterior plot. The previous reader, who thought Stevenson overused similes and metaphors, is a bit harsh. Stevenson's writing technique is nothing short of excellent. Her style is not sparse; it is more elaborate, like Eggers or Zadie Smith. There are even some passages where Stevenson quotes Voltaire, and these lines are some of the finest in the book. Talitha Stevenson has a promising future ahead of her and I look forward to reading more of her work.

Brilliant debut

Emily is stuck in a sweltering london before university and she falls in love. She is a romantic and realist and lives in a world of people who lie and manipulate and yet somehow get on with their lives together. It is a book about survival and written in an everyday language which is at times rivals anything that modern poetry can offer. A wonderful debut novel.
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