From Publishers Weekly
Dowdy Alma Porch arrives at a school where she will teach drama to students whose primary goal is to lose weight during the month-long session. While the novel is intentionally, but not successfully, absurd, Australian Jolley "offers some provocative reflections on loneliness, self-delusion, role-playing and the always blurred line between reality and imagination," PW observed.
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Review
Hilarious, wry, disturbing, and optimistic. (
Boston Globe )
Delicious . . . a novel of pungent charm. (Angela Carter )
Hilarious and bawdy. (Robert Coover )
Not just a delicious caper. . . .[It glows] in the mind because . . . informed by Jolley’s understanding of our common loneliness and her sympathy with the myriad, ingenious connections we try to make to alleviate it. (Roberta Silman -
The Arts Fuse )
A witty, sophisticated novel. (
Library Journal )
A literary romp...merges fiction and fact in a campy style...Alma Porch is a well-drawn and endearing guide. (
Washington Post )
Reminiscent of Shirley Jackson….This darkly comic tale will appeal to those who love novels of eccentricity and the many foibles of human nature. (
MostlyFiction Book Reviews )
The work of Elizabeth Jolley is a reminder of the glorious contradictions of literature: it's a specific chronicle and a universal exploration, endlessly experimental and easy to read, heartbreaking and hilarious and wise and naive. It's like life, and reading Jolley makes one feel alive. (Daniel Handler (Lemony Snicket) )