First Fruits

by Penelope Evans

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Kate Carr is such a lucky teenager. Although her mother has left, she is far from neglected at home. The girls at school envy her because her father is such a charmer, the most mesmerizing minister in Edinburgh. Kate is special; she is Keith Carr's first fruit, his offering. He is bringing her up in his image, to have it -- his special power, the ability to manipulate people. She practices what he's taught her with devastating effect. But a recurrent dream tantalizes Kate. On the night she show more hosts a sleepover, it comes to her once more, and a truth that has long eluded her is revealed. Then nothing can cleanse her world but fire and death. show less

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Well, this was a find in the bottom of my TBR pile! Set largely in a private girls' school in Scotland, at first it appears that the story is about Kate Carr and her manipulation and the power games she plays with the misfit girls at her school. Told in Kate's very strong first-person narrative voice, it is soon clear that she is an unreliable narrator (my favourite) and is leaving out important information. Some of this is purposeful, but most of it is because she either doesn't know stuff, or doesn't understand what she knows. When Kate goes home, we immediately recognize that she is being manipulated and psychologically abused in a similar way by her father. He is a mesmerizing preacher, and one of the creepiest characters I've met show more in any book this year. Tension grows as Kate brings home Lydia, the new girl, who is captured under creepy-dad's spell. The publisher has labelled this novel "mystery," but although I would describe it as "mysterious," I would label it "psychological thriller" instead.

The book's weakness is that there were a few too many mean girl scenes, and the scenes were overly detailed, which made them plodding and repetitious. I also would have liked to learn more about her father, and what I think was his break-away Calvinist cult. But other than that, this was a great read. This novel earns solid reviews from critics and readers, but there are only 29 copies in LT, which means a lot of people are missing out on a book they'd probably like. I will definitely look for more books by Penelope Evans in the future.

Recommended for: First Fruits seems like the sort of book that would be nominated for the Orange Prize, so if you like those sorts of books, find yourself a copy.
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ThingScore 88
The hothouse world—rife with endless conflicts, envy, one-upmanship, and hidden secrets—of an Edinburgh teenager’s monstrous minutiae. . . .

. . . A wonderfully creepy dose for people who look back on their childhood with uncritical nostalgia.
Jul 1, 2000
added by Nickelini
In this darkly seductive follow-up to Freezing (1998), Evans positions catty Scottish schoolgirls as unknowing victims of a family's control fetish. Part Lolita-esque twist on the psychological thriller, part straight-ahead mystery, this unusual, intriguing story mystifies throughout.
added by Nickelini

Author Information

Picture of author.
8 Works 220 Members

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Dedication
For Anne Bryant Evans, my mother
First words
I made a new friend today.
Blurbers
Rendell, Ruth; Savage, Tom

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Suspense & Thriller, Teen, Young Adult
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6055 .V215 .F57Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000
BISAC

Statistics

Members
45
Popularity
646,032
Reviews
1
Rating
½ (3.57)
Languages
English, German, Swedish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
6
ASINs
2