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Something Rising (Light and Swift): A Novel by Haven Kimmel
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Something Rising (Light and Swift) : A Novel

by Haven Kimmel

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235724,513 (3.63)8
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Free Press (2004), Hardcover, 288 pages

Member:yourotherleft
Collections:Your libraryRating:
Tags:fiction, ARC, pool
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Showing 1-5 of 7 (next | show all)
I LOVED this book. Absolutely loved it. It started out strong, breaking my heart with little bone-deep truths and minute, mundane tragic moments. The middle was a little slower, but still solid, and it picked back up for a really nice finish.

Read more at http://badgerbooks.blogspot.com/2007/... ( )
  velocibadgergirl | Mar 18, 2008 |
I really enjoyed this growing-up story of a female Indiana pool hustler. From her first pool game, Cassie finds everything she needs at the table, and it fascinated me how she applied the laws of physics to pool (I'm sure any good player does that, but I never thought about it before). I didn't find it distracting that I know nothing at all about pool; I thought it was explained as well as it needed to be for the story. I met Haven Kimmel at a book signing several years ago, and found her to be such an interesting person that I can picture her writing and narrating her books. A+ for this one. ( )
  tloeffler | Mar 8, 2008 |
Someone who is not interested in the game of pool might find getting involved in this story a bit dificult. The characters, a young girl coming-of-age & her pool-playing mentors are not very likeable people. The setting, a run-down town in rural Indiana, is hardly inspiring. The plot rambles as the girl constantly challanges people to games of pool, winning & losing are seen as metaphors to her smoewhat chaotic life.
A relaxing read, though & the conditions depicted in the Indiana town are all too common in the rural mid-west. ( )
  MarianV | Oct 25, 2007 |
I honestly don’t know what to say about this one. I found it very uneven - parts of it I loved and thought were lyrical and magical. Parts of it I found so draggy that I had trouble sticking with it. I’ve put it on my keeper shelf for now because I want to try again after a little time has passed and see what my reaction is to a re-read. For now I give it a C-, but that is subject to change. ( )
  DebR | Jul 14, 2007 |
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"On Thursday, in the middle of June, she waited for her father."
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Haven Kimmel

Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0743247779, Paperback)

Young Cassie Claiborne, the heroine of Haven Kimmel's egregiously ill-named novel Something Rising (Light and Swift), is a pool hustler. She learns to shoot pool for money when her unreliable father abandons her, along with her shut-in mother and her neurotic sister. Her growing-up is a dark thing: She has funny friends and pot-smoking good times out on country roads, but she's always carrying the financial and emotional burden left behind by her father. A good daughter, she lives with her mother in her small Indiana hometown till she's 30. Finally, after her mother's death, she decides to visit New Orleans to learn about her family's past. Up to this point, the novel is a sensitively written coming-of-age story, a little on the slow side. The book really takes off when Cassie hits the Big Easy. A taciturn, almost compulsively private person, she finds herself encountering enchanting strangers at every turn. A new friend named Miss Sophie grills Cassie about her line of work, and she replies, "I play pool for money. I just announce myself, I say I've come to a place to play their best, and for money, and that person is called. Or I wait for him." Miss Sophie replies "My interest in this is so sudden it feels lewd." The exchange gives an idea of the malleability and strength of Kimmel's style. You believe in both the gruff Cassie and the effusive Miss Sophie, and you believe they could charm each other. Such off-kilter connections are, in a sense, the point of the novel; it's a book about the serendipity of finding someone to like. --Claire Dederer

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 20:15:37 -0500)

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