Flying in Place

by Susan Palwick

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Once in a while, a first novel arrives like a bolt of lightning, commanding attention with an explosion of power, grace, and light. Flying in Place is such a book. As unflinching as The Lovely Bones, as startling as Beloved, it is a work to bear witness, with bravery and compassion, for the experience of millions of readers and their loved ones. Emma is twelve, a perfectly normal girl, in a perfectly normal home. With a perfectly normal father, who comes into her bedroom every night in the show more hours before dawn. Emma will do anything to escape. From the visits. From the bodies. From the breathing. Even go walking on the ceiling, which is where Emma meets Ginny, the sister who died before she was born. Ginny, who knows things. Ginny, who can fly. show less

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MyriadBooks For a story that will break your heart and coax it to heal again.

Member Reviews

9 reviews
This book has been harvesting so much praise, that it almost becomes impossible to say something adverse. Still, I think the book is a bit overrated. The subject matter (sexual child abuse by a father) makes for cautious reading (and writing), but the subject is luckily developed without any downright horror scenes, which is a boon. Victim 12-year old Emma learns to leave her body, in order that she does not have to consciously experience every rape. 'Outside' she meets her deceased sister, whose conversation at first is gibberish to Emma, but later on proves to be instrumental to the books' conclusion and solution. So far so good. It's original, readably written and the story is enchaining and moving.
What's not so good, though, is the show more cardboard character of almost all of the protagonists. The father is a cartoon: a cold and criminal brute with no other sides at all. The uncaring and hopelessly narrow-minded mother, a snob avant la lettre is only slightly better. The loud, ramshackle and ultimately kindhearted neighbours are prototypes of never-failing good people, with no negative sides, except their being so unkempt. These seem out of place in a novel with such a realistic tone.
Even Emma herself seems somewhat one-dimensional. I could not really relate to the way she as a 12-year old still thinks her mother will die if she betrays what her father does to her.
By far the best personage is her sister Ginny, residing in a twilight 'middle-ground', where she is compelled to appear to give Emma a clue. These passages are in their utter strangeness very convincing. The final turns of the story-line are excellent too.
The book succeeds on the score of the development of the story, the careful way of addressing such a grievous subject and the credible portrayal of her dead sister and the twilight zone she lives in.
The monochrome characters are a let-down, though...
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This book tackles a very difficult subject: a parent who molests his child. Everything about the subject is distasteful, yet Susan Palwick does a very good job of telling the story through 12 year old Emma, the victim of the abuse. What Emma does to protect herself from her father's behavior, something over which she has no control, is written with such credibility it's easy to believe this story could actually happen.
Totally blown away by this book. It left me speechless after the last page. Such a heart gripping look at a topic that makes normal people want to go postal. Highly recommend!!!
A very painful book to read, but well worth it.
Emma is a 12 year old overweight girl, being sexually abused by her father. She learns to get through the ordeals by "leaving her body". While she is doing this, she meets an older sister that passed away years before. This is a heartbreaking story of sadness, abuse and loss.
Read in one setting. Unlike any book I have ever read.
A wonderful book that more people should know about.

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35+ Works 985 Members

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Flying in Place
Original publication date
1992-05
People/Characters
Emma; Ginny
Dedication
For Liz, Terri, and Claudia
First words
Bret found the letters today.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Somewhere, she still is.
Blurbers
Lurie, Alison; Yolen, Jane; Vachss, Andrew; Coville, Bruce; Gear, Kathleen O'Neal; Gear, W. Michael (show all 8); Murphy, Pat; Ryman, Geoff

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3566 .A554 .F58Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
177
Popularity
185,392
Reviews
9
Rating
(4.13)
Languages
English, Italian
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
6
ASINs
1