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The People Who Watched Her Pass By [Paperback]

Scott Bradfield (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 1, 2010

"Brave and unforgettable. Scott Bradfield creates a country for the reader to wander through, holding Sal's hand, assuming goodness." -Los Angeles Times


"Scott Bradfield is an otherworldy writer. There is an inarguable wholeness to [The People Who Watched Her Pass By], as in certain dreams." -Rain Taxi


"Drive[s] straight into the Zen void at the heart of the classic road." -Bookforum


"A wake-up call shouting Bradfield's humorously erudite take on modern American life." -WOSU


In his fifth novel, Scott Bradfield delivers an arresting and unsentimental childhood voice.

Salome Jensen is three years old when she is taken from her home by the man who fixes the hot water heater. As Sal drifts through Laundromats and people’s homes, she develops a perspective of the world and an understanding of its people more meaningful than the most erudite observer could muster.

Sal is never a victim or abused, she’s simply a child providing a humorous and fresh take on society.

The People Who Watched Her Pass By is often hilarious as well as startling, and it is a poignant new contribution to the body of literature of a respected prose craftsman.



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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Though Bradfield's fifth novel has the premise of a thriller or a dark psychological study, it flips reader expectations with deadpan irony. At three years old, Sal Jensen is kidnapped by the man who fixed the hot water heater. Known to both Sal and the reader as simply Daddy, he treats her with a respect bordering on reverence, and Sal remains calm and keenly observant. (Significantly, neither Sal's original family nor home are ever mentioned.) When nosy neighbor Mrs. Anderson becomes too intrusive, Daddy soon takes off, in effect leaving Sal in the care of Mrs. Anderson, the first of several foster families that are revealed in strung-together and seemingly interchangeable vignettes. Most intriguing among the set pieces is the Laundromat where Sal lives for several months. Though Bradfield's (The History of Luminous Motion) wounded child's eye-view of a homogenized America isn't exactly new, he's an adept prose stylist, and his portrayal of children as symbols instead of individuals is incisive. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Scott Bradfield is the author of The History of Luminous Motion, Good Girl Wants It Bad, Hot Animal Love, The Secret Life of Houses, Dream of the Wolf, Greetings From Earth, What's Wrong with America, and Animal Planet.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 146 pages
  • Publisher: Two Dollar Radio (April 1, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0982015151
  • ISBN-13: 978-0982015155
  • Product Dimensions: 7.4 x 5.6 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,109,951 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Indie Greatness, October 13, 2010
This review is from: The People Who Watched Her Pass By (Paperback)

God, I love indie publishers. They put out some of the most interesting books I have ever read.

The People Who Watched Her Pass By is author Scott Bradfield's fifth novel, though it is the first book I have read by him.

And it's a horrifying concept - a 3 year old girl kidnapped from her home by the hot water heater fixer. Not only does this guy kidnap her, he deserts her too. And it's the story of this 3 year old girl wandering from house to house, being taken in, and then being let go, over and over and over again. Until she takes matters into her own hands and chooses when she will be taken in, and when she will walk away.... Until the world finally catches up to her.

So, although it's every mother's worst nightmare - to have her child stolen from her, and not being able to find her, or know what has happened to her - and not a very easy novel to digest, it has some of the most amazing and quotable lines I have read in a very long time.

Bradfield twists and manipulates the english language so beautifully that you actually forgive him for writing a book about such a terrible and unspeakable crime. He takes the life of 3 year old Salome and turns it into poetry.

Seriously. Read this line:

"Life is a sweet mistake that happened when the world wasn't looking."

I love this line so much that I almost want to take it to a tattoo parlor and have it etched into my skin so I can keep it with me forever.

And this one, that describes a major turning point of sorts between Salome's previous life (of living in a laundromat) and her next life:

"We can only have one home at a time. But if we are not ready to appreciate it, or we forget the keys, then we can't have any home at all."

One more, I promise:

"When we die... All the things we ever loved become furniture. The hollowness we feel turns into a house. There aren't any other people in it, and that's one of it's blessings. It's just filled with the ghosts of objects we used to own, things we used to feel, memories of patience and heat... In the afterlife, everything is already over. We don't have anything to regret or anything to look forward to."

The entire novel is peppered with these gorgeous moments that simultaneously grab you by your heart and break it in two.

It is this strange, surreal account of a little girl who wanders almost aimlessly through backyards, and down dirt roads, into and out of peoples lives, people who for some reason don't call Child Services, who don't question this little blonde haired angel they have suddenly crossed paths with, who seem hell-bent on bestowing words of wisdom and advice on her, on telling her their sad soul-crushing stories, on giving her a temporary place to stay...

It is not a book for everyone. It will stir some strong emotions. It will piss some people off. It is a book to be experienced, at the very least.

It is the type of book that only an indie publisher would take a risk on, and bravo, Two Dollar Radio... for the opportunity to review it!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Piece of Literature, August 18, 2011
This review is from: The People Who Watched Her Pass By (Paperback)
I really enjoyed this. The writing is good, the characters are interesting if not completely sketched, and the story is attention-grabbing. It's told in third person in the perspective of a little girl who was kidnapped. It's never said how old Salome is, because she herself doesn't know. Events unfold in such a way that it's hard to determine what exactly happened and how serious it is. Sal doesn't stay with one person or one set of people for long. Either they abandon her or she abandons them, never becoming attached to anyone except maybe her "Daddy", the man who took her in the first place.

I like how the story progresses. Any particular situation isn't drawn out, and before you know it you're on to Sal's next destination. The transitions can be abrupt, however. You find out more as you read, and it's understandably vague sometimes because Salome is the one observing, and even she doesn't really understand everything that is going on. She is just a kid, after all.

So, this is definitely an interesting little book, worth reading. It could be a tad dull at times, but overall it's a good read.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Passing Life By, November 20, 2010
By 
This review is from: The People Who Watched Her Pass By (Paperback)
The People Who Watched Her Pass By is disturbing, depressing, funny, and darker than any vampire or zombie novel. Bradfield's protagonist, Salome Jensen, is a preschooler with preternatural intelligence who doesn't want to have anything to do with people except for the alienated oddballs who come on like child molesters but only want to protect her. Bradfield turns every pop novel convention inside out and makes you deal with it until you fell you can't take any more. The book starts with a kidnapping of a three-year-old girl. Here we go, the reader thinks: distraught hysterical parents, kidnappers who threaten to do things so awful we find them irresistible, cops and detectives with their own broken lives, the ghoulish media--the cliche machine is rolling.

Only it's not. Sal bonds with her kidnapper, a creepy hot water heater repairman who calls himself Daddy and who gives Sal nothing but his pathetic form of caretaking. Sal moves from Daddy's house through a series of living arrangements with people who are marginal in a way that makes them more disturbing than child molesters and serial murderers because they're too much like us. They're not bad, just sad. But Sal is attracted to them for reasons never made clear. By the same token, she hates the army of social service workers, probation officers, psychologists and the like who keep trying to save her but can't. These are the same people Bradfield had fun with in his previous novel, Good Girl Wants It Bad. Here, though, they're not fun. They're just icky, and after the ironic and hilarious laundromat section Bradfield abandons humor. The book gets darker and darker until we want to throw it down because we know where he, or Sal, is going, and don't want to follow. At the same time, we feel we may already be there. The book's depressing undertone assures it will never come close to best sellerdom. This from a writer of extravagant talent whose physical descriptions surprise on almost every page.

Good Girl Wants It Bad is fun because of the irrepressible voice of the world's most likable serial killer, Delilah Riodan. The People Who Watched Her Pass By is not fun because Sal Jensen gives up. She becomes a metaphor for the writer himself as she withdraws from the world and observes it. But her observations don't cheer or transform. She goes deeper into the long dark night and takes the reader with her. This is one of the most difficult books I've ever finished reading, and I only did so because of its brevity. Scott Bradfield is a writer of enormous gifts. I hope he lets them take him, and the reader, in a more hopeful direction next time.
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