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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars TOUCHING, FUNNY, SMART, TOUGH....
Quinn Dalton is a wonderful writer. These stories will make you remember why you love to read in the first place. they are all delicious though my favorite is Back On Earth, a touching and brilliant take on the life of a woman that has been raped. I know you are thinking, "oh no, not another rape story.." But this is not just another story. This is fresh and raw and...
Published on April 18, 2005 by Tayari Jones

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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good NOT Great
These are easy to read stories however some are a bit difficult to understand. All in all it was a good read...not a great one.
Published on June 3, 2005 by Chic Lit Lover


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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars TOUCHING, FUNNY, SMART, TOUGH...., April 18, 2005
This review is from: Bulletproof Girl: Stories (Paperback)
Quinn Dalton is a wonderful writer. These stories will make you remember why you love to read in the first place. they are all delicious though my favorite is Back On Earth, a touching and brilliant take on the life of a woman that has been raped. I know you are thinking, "oh no, not another rape story.." But this is not just another story. This is fresh and raw and real.

I know that this is suppossed to be a review and not a sales pitch, but I really must say something to the readers out there who are "on the line".. BUY THIS BOOK. BUY IT RIGHT NOW.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Convert to Short Story Collections, June 27, 2005
By 
Carol Kenny "Heavy Reader" (Greensboro, North Carolina) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Bulletproof Girl: Stories (Paperback)
I didn't think I liked short story collections until I was struck by the Bulletproof Girl. I love diving deep into a novel, but I found with the 11 stories in this collection that Quinn Dalton takes me deep, using a snapshot of pivotal moments where challenge meets response. Her crisp, clean writing explores universal themes and routine events in a way that has me rethinking them-and rethinking the short story. It's a great way to squeeze an extraordinary read into a too busy life.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a closer look, April 20, 2005
This review is from: Bulletproof Girl: Stories (Paperback)
in a blurb for this collection, i wrote that dalton's stories are brilliant, wild, scathing, hilarious. they truly are... her writing is psychologically rich, and she tackles the issues that i want to see tackled in contemporary fiction by women and about women. dalton is one of those rare combinations of beautiful literary work that is still about us and the complicated fullness of our everyday lives.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Struggling Women, November 3, 2005
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This review is from: Bulletproof Girl: Stories (Paperback)
A divorced woman's son is traumatized by the death of his dog; a woman is raped by the "crowbar rapist" and tries to deal with the psychological trauma; an apparently normal wife murders her husband's boss. Each of the eleven stories in this collection portrays a woman struggling, trying to come to terms with some impossible situation. The women in these stories are anti-heroines. They don't generally achieve great breakthroughs or turning points. They struggle and they survive. In the quirky final story of the book, a woman is trying to sort out her disappointing relationships with men by packing out her apartment, the story told in second person present tense.

These are "literary" short stories, of the kind in which not much happens, but a situation is explored in depth. As the author relates a woman's story she adds layers of information to flesh out the characters. Things that happened in the past. Relationships with parents and even grandparents. Disillusionment with men. Friends who disappoint.

Author Quinn Dalton is a master of the writing craft and she will keep you engaged with her struggling anti-heroines. Her writing flows easily, and the book is hard to put down. If you like this kind of story, you will love Bulletproof Girl. Reviewed by Louis N. Gruber.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stunning, October 21, 2005
This review is from: Bulletproof Girl: Stories (Paperback)
Quinn Dalton has a way with words. If you've ever tried to explain an emotion but found that simple words - like anger, happiness, love, joy - just aren't sufficient, then you'll love this collection. It's an amazing book to get lost in, one story at a time. "Endurance Tests" was subtly heartbreaking...I had a lump in my throat almost from the very beginning. After reading "Midnight Bowling," I closed the book, put it down, and just sat there being stunned for a while...like I had to digest it before starting on the next.

Dalton is a meticulous writer - not even a spare syllable as filler here - but at the same time wonderfully expansive. She forgoes mundane adjectives and instead creates beautiful descriptions, like "I watch him breathe, touch dripping horns of hair, try to replace my grab with gentleness" (from "Endurance Tests).

Whether you're a fan of short stories or not, this book is worth the cover price and then some.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Women in Peril, May 1, 2005
By 
C M Magee (Chicago, IL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Bulletproof Girl: Stories (Paperback)
Quinn Dalton's recent collection Bulletproof Girl contains eleven stories about women in peril. Not physical peril in the tied to the railroad tracks "save me Indiana Jones" way, but social and emotional peril. Each story is a snapshot, a day or two in the life of a woman who has come up against something in her life that is big and hard to move. My favorite story was "Lennie Remembers the Angels" about an elderly woman who is paranoid about her neighbors but turns a blind eye to her son's transgressions. There is a physicality to her language in this story: damp heat, dark apartments and overpowering food smells. Like "Lennie," several of the stories in the collection could be mistaken for chapters in a novel; they aren't self-contained. Dalton is very good at fleshing out her characters, and we know their individual histories. As she leads her protagonists through their hard times, we are given stories that are as character-driven as they are plot-driven. The long title story broadens the themes the Dalton explores in the rest of the collection. Instead of one woman, we have three: Emery, May and Celeste, three generations from the same family, all at difficult crossroads and alternately comforting and pitying one another. Emery is smarting from the loss of her boyfriend, her mother May has been driven to odd obsessive behavior ever since her husband moved out, and old Celeste the grandmother is vibrant, but will not sympathize with her daughter, and instead takes them all on a macabre errand.
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4.0 out of 5 stars gentle stories, believable characters, January 5, 2006
This review is from: Bulletproof Girl: Stories (Paperback)
The 11 stories in this collection are about women in various stages and states in their lives. All of the voices are authentic and believable, and show both women's internal lives, as well as the external forces around us - the expectations of our mothers, our friends, society. It is also very easy to read and well written; you don't get bogged down in too many details, or too many horrible, depressing things, like so many literary novels tend to do.

Some stories I liked better than others. "Bulletproof Girl", the title story, with three generations of women, seemed a bit confusing to me... I had a hard time keeping track of which woman was the current focus. I also didn't quite "get" the point of the story "Package", and I thought the description of who the dog was named after was unnecessary and did nothing to move the story along.

"Lennie Remembers the Angels" was sad, but hopeful - a woman late in her life, disappointed by how it turned out, and surprised by kindness from a stranger. "Dough" perfectly captured the joy and agony of your first, young love, and the belief that it will last forever, although of course it doesn't.

My favorite stories were "Endurance Tests" - a perfectly written gem that tied so well together; and "Back on Earth" - a woman recovering from a rape. (I did find it a bit confusing - she spoke of x-rays of her bones, but there was no indication that she had been physically damaged other than rape itself - I couldn't figure out if the perp had also broken bones, or if it was just her psyche that was shattered.)

In all, this is a great collection, and women should buy it just to support the author and this type of writing!
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good NOT Great, June 3, 2005
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This review is from: Bulletproof Girl: Stories (Paperback)
These are easy to read stories however some are a bit difficult to understand. All in all it was a good read...not a great one.
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Bulletproof Girl: Stories
Bulletproof Girl: Stories by Quinn Dalton (Paperback - April 19, 2005)
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