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The Orpheus Obsession
 
 
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The Orpheus Obsession [Hardcover]

Dakota Lane (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

Price: $16.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Book Description

June 28, 2005

Anooshka Stargirl sometimes sees her life as a movie. But she can't escape the realities. At home there's a depressed mother who often won't emerge from bed. And a dad who's not in the picture. There are two best friends but a stifling pack of aspiring glamour girls. Fortunately there's Zoetrope Zallulah Moon, modish older sister extraordinaire, living a bus ride away in New York City.

Visiting Moon one summer weekend when the heat won't relent, Anooshka hears rock singer Orpheus's music. She's immediately entranced by his sound. His lyrics seem to echo her mood and light a spark in her core. After meeting the shy, approachable Orpheus by chance, Anooshka can't shake him from her head. And his Internet diaries keep signaling that they share a magnetic synchronicity. Soon Orpheus expresses an interest in her, and like the Greek mythological heroine Eurydice, Anooshka descends deep into a mesmerizing underworld -- until she reaches a place where fantasies topple and the unspoken finally makes itself heard.

Dakota Lane's tantalizing, allegorical tale follows a teen's obsession as it transforms into empowering self-discovery.


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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Starred Review. Grade 10 Up–This lyrical, angst-filled story of a 16-year-old girl's obsession with a musician will appeal to teens looking for an edgy love story. Anooshka Stargirl lives in a small New York town with her mentally unstable mother; her father left long ago, and her beloved older sister, ZZ Moon, lives in New York City. Moon introduces her to the music of a 21-year-old singer called Orpheus, and Anooshka feels an instant sense of connection. In one of the novel's several too-good-to-be-true coincidences, she immediately stumbles upon a photo shoot during which she meets Orpheus and gets his autograph. Soon she is consumed by the performer's lyrics and spends hours reading the journal entries on his Web site. She seeks him out in person and convinces herself that their developing relationship is special. Anooshka believes she is more than a mere groupie to him, and that they are meant to be together. Her obsession takes her deeper and deeper into Orpheus's world, where she also discovers more about herself and the reasons for her fixation. Though the few sex scenes are not graphic, drug and alcohol use and some rough language make the novel more suitable for older teens. Sensitive readers will identify with Anooshka's intense emotions and enjoy the highly descriptive, poetic language she uses to express her feelings and to depict her world.–Miranda Doyle, San Francisco Public Library
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Gr. 9-12. Lane's first novel, Johnny Voodoo (1996), was notable for its eerie melancholy and clear, tender narrative. Her newest title takes a fascinating premise and develops it with even more highly crafted prose. What teenager has not felt that the lyrics of a favorite rock singer's song speak directly to him or her. After Anooshka Stargirl hears an Orpheus CD, she is entranced. She spends hours in chat rooms devoted to the singer and follows his online diary, marveling at how their thoughts, interests, and wishes intersect. Unlike most teens who develop a crush on a musician, Anooshka actually meets Orpheus and ends up in a relationship of sorts. Lane incorporates black-and-white photographs (Anooshka is a photographer), song lyrics, Internet postings, and screenplay excerpts to give the reader a kaleidoscoic view of Anooshka's experience. Fascinating, fully developed characters abound, from the enigmatic Orpheus to Anooshka's mentally ill and sometimes abusive mother. Although the heavily counterculture setting (Woodstock) may limit the audience, the appealing premise and experimental, crystalline prose will draw and hold readers. Debbie Carton
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 14 and up
  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Katherine Tegen Books; First Edition edition (June 28, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060741732
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060741730
  • Product Dimensions: 7.3 x 5.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,827,759 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
5 star:
 (5)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars you will love this book, December 3, 2005
By 
firebird (New York City) - See all my reviews
a lot happened when i picked up this book

one: the characters moved into my head. this is good.
i'm still listening to them because they know things that i don't

two: now i can figure out the guy in my world.
so he's a rock star? maybe yes maybe no.

three: DAMN --Dakota got that right! i kept saying that through the whole book.
especially when she says exactly how a smell smells. is that possible? amazingly, yes.

four: now i humbly see life as the amusement park ride it really is. even the crap.
i will not change back. never.

five: Dakota's books make me want to write. actually she makes me HAVE TO WRITE.
it all started with Johnny Voodoo
which you must read if you didn't yet.

IN CONCLUSION:

if your life goes from THE PIT to TOTAL MAGIC one or more times
in 24 hours then you will love this book.
it will make you feel normal.

if your life is boring then you will love this book
because it is fun.

if you love song lyrics then you will love this book.
read it and find out. do that. i mean it.

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A young adult novel that is lively and wise., August 9, 2005
By 
Anonymous (Truth or Consequences, NM) - See all my reviews
This is a wonderful young adult novel by an author who has not forgotten what is is like to be a young adult obsessed with a famous personality (her Orpheus is a rock star) and yet understands too what it is to be a grown-up. So the book is lively and wise. Lane is a very good writer and I recommend this book for every school, library, and teenage reader.

Must take issue with another review posted here: why do people think that their friends who are authors should GIVE them complimentary copies of books? Does your grocery store give you free groceries because you live nearby? This is how your neighbor earns a living! Honor that and buy her book if you can afford it. If you can't, remind your library to buy several copies and check one of them out and read it.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Officially in Love with Dakota Lane, December 16, 2010
By 
This review is from: The Orpheus Obsession (Hardcover)
I bought Orpheus and Johnny Voodoo together and jumped right into Orpheus, eager to see if my friend's recommendation was spot on, and found myself unable to pull free until the ride came to an end. So what is it about Dakota's writing that lures you in and keeps you hooked? Simple, it's her beautiful prose, whimsical descriptions, acutely accurate voice and exceptional characters. There are few books out there that can transport you from the sofa in your drafty living room and drop you into the middle of New York City on a sweltering summer day and fill you with the scents and colors and vibrations of that experience. But Ms. Lane does just that. Her mastery of language, her analogies and vivid descriptions are so stirring and so evocative they hold you captive, unwilling or unable to release you until every word is consumed. Dakota Lane even made me fall in love with a tiny parakeet named Zach, which is no small feat as I'm not a big fan of the noisy little creatures.

This story is about Nu (Anooshka) Star, a sixteen year old girl from upstate New York, who develops an obsessive fixation on Orpheus, a local rocker from NYC. Thankfully, Nu's older sister, ZZ Moon, has a pad in the city which allows for a relationship between Nu and Orpheus to blossom after an unexpected and unplanned run in with the rocker at a photo shoot. Only this isn't the relationship Nu has envisioned and what the readers sees and feels is not quite what Nu is experiencing, at least not in the beginning. We follow Nu on this wacky and sometimes traumatic ride to its obvious and painful conclusion all the while screaming at her to wake up and smell the coffee. But Nu is sweetly oblivious and her view of herself and the world around her is seen through stilted eyes making it impossible to become frustrated with her. So we're stuck watching her make heart-wrenching mistakes all the while baring her soul to someone not worthy of the depth of love she is willing to give.

Ms. Lane has created a beautiful cast of characters in Orpheus. They are all flawed, but not overdone, and are thoughtfully constructed. Nu is perfectly drawn, sharp and smart but blinded by impossible hope and a desperate need to be seen and loved. She's strong yet vulnerable and fraught with internal conflict and longstanding pain. She's the type of character so many author's try to created and fail to capture accurately. I simply loved her and found myself wishing she were real so that I could hug her and remind her that it gets better from here. In understanding her history the reader is forced to understand her present, not that it makes it any less painful, because it doesn't, instead it allows one to walk in her shoes, see and feel the hope she harbors and understand the blinders she so willingly bears. There is enough balance between the traumas of the past and present and the ever-present spark of hope that one can't help but root for Nu to get what she wants, even though we understand the outcome is preordained.

The supporting cast of characters are as wonderful as Nu. ZZ Moon is wise yet fractured, but a wonderfully supportive sister and truly Nu's best friend. Raphael and Agnes add a level of much needed sanity in Nu's world and their importance in her life is evident by the absolute depth of their understanding and devotion. Nu's mother is equal parts insensitive and lost and I find myself torn between anger and pity when thinking of her. Orpheus is a character you love to hate and hate to love. As much as I want to simply call him a butt-head I just couldn't. Certainly his intentions were clear, if not to Nu than to the reader, but there was an underlying melancholy about him that made him human. Perhaps I was reading a little too into it, or perhaps I was having a Nu moment myself, but in Orpheus' online journal entries I saw someone raw and injured too. But since the story was more focused on Nu and not Orpheus, we'll never really know, but I'd like to think I'm right, otherwise he was just a tool.

The use of photographs throughout the novel is pure brilliance and made these characters and scenes living, breathing things. These candids and destination shots are sprinkled in at appropriate and pivotal times and make the story come alive. In addition, the use of Orpheus' lyrics are poignant and only help to tell the story. Key sentiments are expressed in his own words, even before he steps foot on the page, and help to drive the narration, giving the reader necessary insight into Nu's absolute fascination/obsession. As I noted above, I have to believe there was more to Orpheus than the jerk personification. The carefully crafted lyrics Ms. Lane penned in many respects echoed Nu's own thoughts and feelings, hence the obsession. Since we're offered a direct and unobstructed window into Nu's own psyche, it only makes sense that Orpheus, at least on some level, must suffer some of the same self-doubt and perhaps a touch of self-loathing. Needless to say, the parallels are made clear and it only serves to make one more curious and open-minded where Orpheus is concerned.

I have one minor complaint, the ending. It seemed a little rushed and fell a bit flat for me. But that is such a minor complaint when looking at the piece as a whole and one I am inclined to ignore as the balance of the story was so wonderful. More than anything I wish Ms. Lane took the ending a bit farther, fleshing out the new Nu and bringing it to a more solid conclusion. Not that it's ambiguous in any way, it simply lacks the umph I was hoping for.

In essence, this is undoubtedly a book I will read again and am certain to cherish it as much, if not more, the next time around.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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Imagine having two good wings and never using them. Read the first page
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Orpheus Online New York, Anooshka Star, Brighton Beach
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