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Loading... The Girls' Guide to Hunting and Fishingby Melissa Bank
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I have to say I was expecting something a little different but that being said I really enjoyed this book. It was like a series of short stories about Jane's life. I was a little confused by one story that seemed to have nothing to do with Jane but other than that it was well written. I give this book 4 stars out of 5. 2006 [A Girls' Guide to Hunting and Fishing] by Melissa Bank is a light and casual story following a 14 year old girl as she experiences life. The chapters are centered around specific periods of her life, when she first observes love through her brother and his glamorous girlfriend, when she finds love herself at college, the love she observes between her parents, a relationship with an older man, her relationship with her new boss, an old relationship revisited, and the love she feels for her children and their loves. This book reads like short vignettes into a woman's life as it unfolds. This is a tear-jerker and will also make you laugh. Perfect specimen of reader fulfillment. Great winter afternoon read. no reviews | add a review
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Bank's first collection has a beautiful, true arc, and all the sophistication and control her heroine could ever desire. In "The Floating House," Jane and her boyfriend, Jamie, visit his ex-girlfriend in St. Croix, and right from the start she can't stop mimicking her beautiful competitor, in a notably idiotic fashion. "I'm like one of those animals that imitates its predators to survive," she realizes--one of several thousand of Bank's ruefully funny phrases. But even as Jane clowns around, desperately trying to keep up appearances, she is so hyperaware it hurts. Again and again, the author explores the dichotomy between life as it happens and the rehearsed anecdote, the preferred outcome. In The Girls' Guide to Hunting and Fishing, even suburban quiet has "nothing to do with peace." Bank's much-anticipated debut merits all its buzz and, more to the point, transcends it. --Kerry Fried
(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 14:56:52 -0500)
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"'Well,' he said. 'Get over here.'
And so I went."
It may have been where I was in my life at the time versus where I am now. Or perhaps it was just that reading that in context of the rest of the novel gives it a new meaning. Either way, I now see that this small paragraph is simply descriptive of the narrator's tendency toward co-dependence. It is not romantic, but sad.
I liked the book as a whole, although individually I can see the stories being poignant as well. I love a happy ending though (spoiler alert) so for me it was satisfying for things to eventually turn out well for the narrator.
(Review from my blog: http://thenext100books.blogspot.com/) (