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Blanche McCrary Boyd

Author of The Revolution of Little Girls

9+ Works 546 Members 4 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Courtesy of Serpent's Tail Press

Series

Works by Blanche McCrary Boyd

Associated Works

The Best American Short Stories 1989 (1989) — Contributor — 201 copies, 1 review
The Penguin Book of Women's Humour (1996) — Contributor — 124 copies
American Review 25 (1976) — Contributor — 5 copies

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Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
I hadn't read Boyd since her Mourning The Death of Magic back in 1977 (!) and picked this one up because I remembered the earlier novel, and also - who could resist such a title? Turned out to be very worth while, and that this is the third in a series of stories about Ellen Burns. A lesbian who sleeps with men, and with anyone appealing who crosses her path, she's a supercharged libido-driven fascinating woman, who would have been termed a "good broad" back in the Rat Pack days. Here, she show more finds out that her brother's daughter has murdered her two children, and that her brother, a white supremacist tied in with Timothy McVeigh's cohorts, is still alive twenty years he was thought to have died in a fire similar to the Branch Davidian episode. There's a lot of good factual information about these terrorists, and a painful and powerful exploration of the impact of these beliefs on the country and on Ellen's family. The mystery, and the challenges to Ellen's longtime sobriety that result, makes for an excellent and thoughtful read. show less
Picked this up because of the title and the jacket description. Was totally into it until the last 1/3 of the book where I became lost as to what was the meaning behind this story. Where was it going? And then it ended so abruptly. Still not sure how I feel about it...
½
1.75 stars i guess. i'm unclear about what i just read. i mean the purpose or meaning because there didn't seem to be much; but at least it was quick and easy and well enough written (although nothing special) in the meanwhile. the way time was handled was weird as it went back and forth and jumped around a lot; incidents and people were introduced and never alluded to again. almost like it was a collection of stories that were made into a novel, but not evened out when put together. i'm not show more sure why this won the lambda literary award because it's not particularly queer or deep, in my reading. show less
½
The funniest, gutsiest lesbian fiction I've read. Chapter 3 remains one of my all-time laugh-out-loud favorites.
A great, great book.
-- Michael

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Statistics

Works
9
Also by
4
Members
546
Popularity
#45,668
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
4
ISBNs
27
Languages
3
Favorited
2

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