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Loading... Trash Sex Magic (original 2004; edition 2007)by Jennifer Stevenson
Work InformationTrash Sex Magic by Jennifer Stevenson (2004)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. A refreshing answer to all those cookie-cutter gritty urban fantasies - trailer park fantasy! Full of glorious rampaging nature and sex goddesses in hot pants. A pure joy from beginning to end. ( ) I found this book after reading about it on Audrey Niffenegger's Web site -- she loved it. It's the most unusual book I've read in a long time, Niffenegger's "Her Fearful Symmetry" included. Early Alice Hoffman comes to mind. The title says it all: improbably set in rural Indiana, it's a supernatural tale of how Nature triumphs over a poorly planned housing project. Loved the scene(s) where the Bahamanian turns into what, a river god? Trash Sex Magic is about, well, what's in the title. The magical stability of a riverside part of land is in trouble, and can only be solved with sexual magic. Which might sound like the book's just an excuse for lots of shallow humping. Except for the part where Stevenson has written a cast of great, real characters, has made her magic dark and troublesome, has a plot that keeps moving, and treats sex as a complicated and integral part of the book's characters. I had trouble putting this one down at night. I really, really wanted to love it. People who I respect the heck out of love it. I remember when Jennifer was coming up with the title and I thought it sounded great and wanted to read it. And I can tell that it's written very well. But I'm just not the reader for this book, and it pains me to say that. Most of the reviews I read called Trash Sex Magic a love story, and it is that, but it's mostly the story of Raedawn Somershoe who, along with her mother, creates magic through sex. The giant tree that anchored the area and that housed the essence of Raedawn's friend/lover has been cut down by a developer, and now nature's going all haywire, particularly the river. What's needed is someone to take his place, and she finds him in Alexander Cabeau, whose grandmother sent him from the Bahamas. A synopsis of the plot really does nothing to explain this story. I called it "literary fantasy," which is my way of trying to convey the feel of the book, but maybe a better term would be "poetic fantasy," because it affected me like poetry. Some of what happens in the book is "real," some is metaphor, and some is magic, and it's not always easy to tell which is which. In fact, I'm half convinced that the entire book is metaphor. But I'm a more literal reader. I love fantasy and magic, but I like it to be grounded. For me, this is like trying to focus on one of those hidden picture paintings--I can do it, I can see the hidden picture, but it's hard work, and it gives me a headache. Just like with poetry, I got tired and frustrated trying to figure out what was real, and waiting for something to happen. And just like with good poetry, I can tell that this is a really well-written book, but I can't feel it myself. It's like looking at a pair of gorgeous shoes, but they're a size 6, and there's no way I can wear them. I know they're great shoes, but I can't have them. So, 3.5 stars, which is what my personal enjoyment level of the book was: I liked it, but it's not a keeper for me. I used to think I was lacking or intellectually lazy because I don't enjoy poetry, or books like this, but now I think it's just a matter of brain wiring. Don't disillusion me, please. no reviews | add a review
AwardsDistinctions
"This just absolutely rocks."--Audrey Niffenegger "Raunchy, funny, and disturbing."--Chicago Reader "Deeply charming."--The Washington Post A tender, joyful, raunchy, radiant novel. ImagineThe Metamorphoses orA Midsummer Night's Dream transported to the woods of Illinois. When a development company cuts down a beloved tree, and tries to drive out Raedawn Summer's family, strange things start to happen. No library descriptions found.
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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