From Publishers Weekly
First-time author Hassinger excels at describing the title character's "limited and limiting" adolescent mind, but stage and screen actress Barron (Guiding Light; Amy Rules) truly brings this troubled character to life in this eerily seductive narrative. Told from the perspective of Nina Begley, who was with her younger brother when he drowned, the novel tracks the unraveling of a family. After the accident, Nina's father turns to drink and her artist mother, Marion, shutters herself in her room. To draw her mother out, Nina offers to pose for a painting and doesn't even balk when Marion asks her to pose nude. Hassinger perfectly captures the guilt and thirst for affection that compels Nina to pose nude and, eventually, to attend an art exhibit featuring her own adolescent body. Barron's vocal talents shine here, as well. Though she narrates the story in soft, muted tones, her voice takes on all the uncertainty and rebelliousness of youth when teenage Nina strikes back at her narcissistic mother by having a secret affair with Marion's 30-something ex-beau. All in all, Barron's skilled, sensitive telling nicely compliments Barron's expressive prose, making this an exceptional audio adaptation.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Audio Cassette
edition.
After her younger brother drowned, Nina tried to pull her artist mother, Marian, out of her grief by offering to pose for a painting. Marian gradually became obsessed with chronicling Nina's emerging adolescent body in a series of nude portraits, and the paintings have become a success, earning Marian the notoriety she's yearned for. Now, at 15, Nina is embarrassed that her changing body is on view to the public. "They're seeing
art, not porn," insists her mother, but Nina's father worries about "sexual predators." Hassinger's first novel explores these two provocative viewpoints through the intimate story of a family's unraveling. Nina is thrilled and disturbed by Leo, a thirtysomething art critic, and even after she learns about his secret history with her mother, Nina is coaxed into an affair with him. Hassinger makes Nina's loss of innocence and plunge into self-destruction chillingly believable. Her graceful, observant prose beautifully captures Nina's inner world--her guilt, yearning, anger, desire, and joy--while ruthlessly skewering the narcissism of ambitious adults. An unsettling and acutely sensitive debut.
Gillian EngbergCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.