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Missy: A Novel by Chris Hannan
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Missy: A Novel

by Chris Hannan

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373163,735 (3.33)None
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Farrar, Straus and Giroux (2008), Hardcover, 304 pages

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Dol McQueen is a young prostitute living in the Wild West. After a few unlucky mishaps at her boarding house, Dol and a few of the other working girls decide to strike out on their own in San Antonio. During the trip to their new town, Dol unwittingly saves the life of a pimp named Pontius who is on the run with a stolen crate of opium, and that's where her real troubles begin. You see, Dol is an opium addict, and although she would never dream of ingesting the contents of the crate, she knows how much it's worth, and she wants to sell it and use the money to straighten up her life. Although she's not ashamed of the life she leads, the "missy" she's addicted to coats her perceptions and she remains lost in a sort of indifference that keeps her blissfully unaware of her predicament in life. Dol's life is further complicated by her mother, who is perpetually drunk and abusive towards her and all the other settlers in the town. As Dol spends her days trying to stay clear of the angry pimp while trying to cage the opium, she must also attempt to keep her mother from drinking herself to death. When Pontius is set upon by a band of dangerous trackers looking for the opium and forcibly removed from the settlement, Dol and her companions go after him, into the blazing desert, bent on taking the prize. Now the girls must race to find the pimp and the crate before the trackers, Indians or thieves do. But during the harsh trip, Dol must leave the "missy" behind and with clearer perceptions beginning to dawn, she discovers the secrets to her mother's ambitions and desires, and comes to realize just what sort of person she herself really is.

I got a lot of enjoyment out of this book. Despite her bad reputation, Dol was a really fun character to get invested in. She had all the qualities of a great heroine, and the less desirable aspects of her personality made for immersive reading. I found her to be both smart and scrupulous, with a huge capacity for irreverence and humor sprinkled throughout. She seemed to always be plotting, and though many times she ended up with the short end of the stick, the more trouble she got herself into, the deeper I was drawn in. Her morals were relaxed at all times, and she had no problem making sure that she stayed on the very top of the heap, but she did it with heartfelt frankness, and though her convictions were very skewed, she still had them.

Although the book dealt with topics that are sometimes indelicate, there was no real baseness to the story, and most of the sexual endeavors of the lead females were not specifically detailed. In other words, this was not a shocking and dirty book. There were a few violent scenes, but nothing that I would say pushed the envelope. Some of the situations in the book weren't pretty, but the author had a way of writing them with a no-nonsense factuality, and didn't stoop to moroseness and darkness. Lets face it, the lives of a group of prostitutes in the 1800s are bound to be fraught with certain types of ugliness and unpleasantness. The fact that the author wrote with such humor while telling of these unpleasant times made the book a far different experience than what it could have been.

The plot was extremely well done. It was an odd story, full of action and pathos, but it dealt with a side of life that is under-examined and mostly hidden from polite society. And it was fascinating. There was no filler here. Each part of the action followed hot on the heels of the last, and the result was a story that moved along with a great clip and intensity. The story was both rich and playful, and Doll was a unique and entertaining narrator, showing gumption in the ways she both addressed and tackled the problems that seemed to attack her out of the blue. I also wasn't prepared for how funny this book was. I found myself giggling helplessly as some of the more savory details of the plot emerged. Though the writing style wasn't taxing, it also wasn't elementary, and the author employed a great use of irony throughout the book. It was the kind of story that your eyes hungrily gobble, and read frantically to discover the next muddle that this remarkable girl would get herself embroiled in.

I also liked that there were varying degrees of evil in the book. Whereas Dol's mother was a wicked woman who was intent on making her daughter unhappy, her character couldn't even hold a candle to the awfulness of Pontius, who in turn couldn't begin to be as malicious as the people who were hunting him. At times, Dol had to choose between the lesser of these three evils, and other times she was fighting all three at once. There were a handful of very memorable characters in this book, and they were well used to fully round out the narrative.

I was also amused at the relationships she had with the other girls. Though some had her full respect and admiration, others she derided and shunned, which made for some rather lively showdowns, especially towards the end of the book. Dol's addiction problems were also quite interesting. She never seemed to breach a certian level of depravity when it came to the opium, but it was clear that it was running her and not the other way around. There were some interestingly symbolic hallucinations and dream sequences, when Dol would go off into her own world after indulging, and some of them were brilliantly prophetic and fearsome. The ending of the book was completely satisfying, with all the loose ends being tied up nicely in a way that didn't feel forced or trite at all.

I wish this book had been longer. It was a great feeling to be so entertained and amused by Dol and her weird antics, and I would have gladly accompanied her further along her journeys, had it only been written. I think the author did a great job concocting Dol into a very sympathetic and winning character, and his sense sense of plot was magnificent. If you are looking for a really unique reading experience and really like your characters to have a lot of pluck, I would definitely recommend this book to you. It's both character and plot driven, and it has wonderful historical flavor. Remarkably entertaining. ( )
  zibilee | Aug 25, 2009 |
It isn't very often that I read a book and I think, "Wow, I didn't know that!" But this Scottish playwright surprised the heck out of me.

Dol McQueen is a 19-year-old "well-used" young lady in the Old West. She and her girlfriends travel west to Sierra Nevada to start a new life. She gets some help from missy, which is another word for laudanum or liquid opium. Ohhhhh, you say! Dol's life stinks, and she doesn't know it because she's too high. She gets beaten up by men with flashy rings and her mother is a drunk loser.

I just had no idea this kind of life existed. It's not Bonanza or Little House on the Prairie--that's for sure ! But the author makes the tale work. I devoured this book and hoped that Dol would come to her senses. ( )
  sarahthelibrarian | Sep 16, 2008 |
historical fiction
  bs0merville | Jun 12, 2008 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0374199833, Hardcover)

Missy is laudanum, or liquid opium. Missy is Dol McQueen, a nineteen-year-old “flash-girl” traveling the arduous wagon trail from San Francisco to the boomtowns of the Sierra Nevada. Her purpose: to fleece the silver miners and to have a marvelous time.

Permanently gonged on missy, Dol and her entrepreneurial instincts wake up only when she comes into possession of a rum crate full of pure opium. But the crate has several owners, each more brutal than the last. Soon, instead of selling the boodle and opening her own establishment, Dol is fleeing across the salt flats and wastelands of the monumental American Southwest, where Civil War renegades, Native American mule thieves, and gangs of feral kids make hanging on to life a job for both hands.
 
Chris Hannan has mixed the irresistible Mark Twain of Roughing It with Annie Proulx’s brilliantly macabre wordplay, and the result is a historical novel of startling originality, in which every detail rings true. Dol McQueen is the most engaging antiheroine since Becky Sharp, and she makes Missy a debut of terrific energy, freshness, and delight.

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 07 Jan 2010 15:10:58 -0500)

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