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The God of Animals by Aryn Kyle
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The God of Animals: A Novel

by Aryn Kyle

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577388,206 (3.8)47
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Scribner (2008), Edition: Reprint, Paperback, 336 pages

Member:Lamos_FL
Collections:Your libraryRating:***
Tags:Read in 2007
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Reviewed by Mrs. Foley
From Follett, "Alice Winston is left to help support the family business by boarding the horses of their rich neighbors when her older sister runs away and her parents are no longer able to provide for the family."

This was a great book. A teacher suggested that I read it. This is the author's debut novel and I would definitely want to read any other books she writes.

The Booklist review describes the book well.
"Sixth-grader Alice Winston is having a tough year. Her older sister dropped out of high school and ran off to marry a rodeo cowboy. Her father's horse ranch is teetering on the edge of solvency. Her depressed mother won't get out of bed. And her shop partner just drowned in a canal. Unprepared for the increasingly adult role she finds herself playing, Alice starts telling lies, and soon finds herself in a complicated relationship with her alienated English teacher. Though the powerful building of portents doesn't fully pay off in the end, this is a very impressive debut. Kyle's prose is graceful and mature, and her themes are subtly stitched into the story. Her portrayal of Desert Valley, Colorado, ravaged first by drought and then by rain, captures the isolation and hardship that can characterize western life and also the encroachment of those--the subdivision people--for whom the weather means nothing. A powerful tale, from a writer with real promise, of a girl coming of age amid a dying way of life." Keir GraffCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved ( )
  hickmanmc | Nov 17, 2009 |
  books4micks | Jul 24, 2009 |
  living2read | Jul 24, 2009 |
I happened on this book as a clearance-priced audio book when I needed one, and as such I was far from disappointed. I am glad I read it in audio, though, because of the graphic scenes of violence to the horses, but also the other scenes that were better experienced than created from my own imagination, such as the mayflies. I heard Alice's voice clearly in Lily Rabe's reading, and despite our great differences, I could identify with her. The only thing I think the novel could have done without was the pedophile teacher. Alice's life on the ranch and in her family was enough for her to deal with. ( )
  bkswrites | Jul 13, 2009 |
Fresh heartbreak on every page and a devastating denouement, but I'm not complaining. This was an LT recommendation connected to "Split Estate" and the relationship is apparent: damaged families making shift in small, rural communities. Horse training, riding, and trauma are key features of both. Although Kyle's prose shows the 'hesitation marks' of a debut author, the narrative -- offered as the raw perspective of a tween girl -- is undeniably gripping. ( )
1 vote kylenapoli | May 1, 2009 |
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for my mother
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Six months before Polly Cain drowned in the canal, my sister, Nona, ran off and married a cowboy.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0743561538, Audio CD)

The Significant Seven Spotlight Title, March 2007: Aryn Kyle's haunting coming-of-age novel is the kind of book that you want to share with everyone you know. Twelve-year-old Alice Winston is growing up fast on her father's run-down horse ranch--coping with the death of a classmate and the absence of her older sister (who ran off with a rodeo cowboy), trying to understand her depressed and bedridden mother, and attempting to earn the love and admiration of her reticent, weary father. Lyrical, powerful, and unforgettable, The God of Animals is our must-read, must-own, must-share book for March. --Daphne Durham

Amazon.com
With the sure hand of a seasoned writer, Aryn Kyle has crafted a brilliant debut with her novel, The God of Animals. Alice Winston, living on the family horse ranch, a marginal enterprise in Desert Valley, Colorado, is a 12-year-old girl with more than she can handle and no one to help her cope. Polly, a classmate of hers, drowned in the nearby canal and was carried out by Alice's father, Joe, a member of the volunteer posse. Her older sister, 16-year-old Nona, eloped with a rodeo cowboy. Her mother never leaves her bedroom, a case of clinical depression. "My mother had spent nearly my whole life in her bedroom... Nona said that one day, while I was still a baby, our mother had handed me to her, said she was tired, and gone upstairs to rest. She never came back down."

Joe has little time for Alice, other than counting on her to muck out the stalls and be polite to the paying customers. He doesn't even notice that she has outgrown her clothes. What Kyle does with this scenario is never predictable or clichéd. She writes beautifully of landscapes, interior and exterior, ravaged by extremes: the hottest summer in years, followed by a deluge; a lonely, isolated girl reaching out to a teacher, Mr. Delmar, equally alienated.

Alice starts telling lies, weaving bits and pieces of other people's lives into the tales she tells the teacher. What we eventually find out about her family is more poignant and tragic than anything she can make up. Horse lore is a large part of what explains each of the people in the novel: separating mares from their foals, the way a stud is treated, breaking a horse, ordinary everyday contact. This bond is explored in depth and each person: Alice, Nona, Joe, Joe's father, Alice's mother, is affected by this closeness in a different, unique way, revelatory of each individual's character. Much more than a coming-of-age tale, Kyle told a story of compromises and dreams that will never come true. --Valerie Ryan

10 Second Interview: A Few Words with Aryn Kyle

Q: In 2004, your short story "Foaling Season," the first chapter of The God of Animals, won a National Magazine Award for Fiction for The Atlantic Monthly. Did you have the idea for your book at the time you wrote the short story, or did the novel develop over time?
A: Three years passed between the time that I finished the short story and the time I returned to expand it into a novel. I was always interested in the characters and in the town which the story takes place, but after the story was published, I assumed I was done with them. In the aftermath of graduate school and a failed attempt at another novel, I found myself living back in my hometown of Grand Junction, Colorado, the town that Desert Valley is loosely based upon. More and more, I caught myself thinking about Alice again. I was interested in how the town had changed over the years, in the way that a tide of money and commercial culture was displacing the old families and the old ways. But mostly, I was interested in Alice's family, and in Alice's struggle to make a place for herself in a world that seems to have no place for her. The short story ended before she could really make any headway. I became curious as to where she might go and who she might become if the events of the story continued into the wider space of a novel. The story of The God of Animals starts with Chapter One, but I've always felt that the novel really starts with the second chapter.

Q: How much of your adolescence and personal experience are incorporated into your novel? Like Alice, did you ride horses growing up in Colorado?
A: Lots? None? This is a tricky question to answer. As far as lifestyle and experience, my own adolescence could not have been more different from Alice's. I didn't grow up on a ranch; didn't have a sister; my mother got out of bed and went to work every day. But adolescence is adolescence. Like Alice, I certainly know about loneliness, about longing, about regret, and about the confusion of trying to live in the world without really understanding it. Though, if I were going to be perfectly honest, I would have to admit that these are all things I found myself working through in my twenties, rather than in my teens. I did take riding lessons when I was about Alice's age, and I competed in a few local horse shows. It was such a different world from the one I'd grown up in, and though I gave it up when I started high school, I guess it made a pretty big impression on me.

Q: How did you think of the title?
A: The title didn't come to me until I'd finished the book. I was starting to panic a bit, figuring that no one would be too interested in publishing a book called Novel, which is what I'd named the file on my computer. So I did the only thing I could think of--I frantically thumbed through the pages of the draft waiting for something to pop out at me. I reread the scene between Alice and Mr. Delmar where they discuss God and spirituality. Something about that scene seemed to encapsulate some of the greater themes of the novel, the uncertainty Alice has about the world, her desire to believe in something larger than herself, her fears regarding isolation and loneliness.

Q: Do you have another novel in the works?
A: Lately, I've been working mainly on short stories. It's kind of hard for me to spend so much time working on one project, then dive into another. I've needed the time to get Alice's voice out of my head before I commit to another novel. But I do have a second novel underway--I'm superstitious, though, and it seems like bad luck to talk about something while its still in the works. Mostly, my writing starts with the characters, with understanding their flaws and their desires. Plot, for me, seems to come later, after I know what my characters want, and what they're willing to sacrifice to get it.

Aryn Kyle's Favorite Coming-of-Age Novels


Housekeeping
That Night
Thumbsucker
Ghostworld
Atonement
See all 10 of Aryn Kyle's favorite coming-of-age novels (with commentary)

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:12 -0400)

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