From Publishers Weekly
Gillian Cormier-Brandenburg will lose her Harvard Divinity School fellowship if she doesn't get to work on her dissertation project, an ambitious examination of "secular conversion experiences," in this sweet, well-premised but feeble debut. To procure conversion narratives, Gillian becomes a supervisor to 12 recovering addicts at Responsibility House, a residential treatment program for women. Gillian wants to keep her stipend, but, at 26, she also desperately wants to lose her virginity, and she hopes the motley women of Responsibility House will show her the ropes on the latter while providing narrative fodder for the former. Gillian's hyperintellectual personality and homely appearance contrasts sharply with the sexily roughshod residents, from whom Gillian seeks approval; she also finds herself lusting after a Harley-riding resident named Janet. Gillian's attempts at gaining the women's acceptance and trust falls at cross-purposes with the strict rules of the halfway house, a conflict that plays out repeatedly; Gillian's moral posturing presents questions that are compelling, but end up repetitive. And while Gillian is well developed as a narrator, her relationships with the residents are thin, resulting in often wooden exchanges. Still, the sympathetic reader will applaud Gillian as she gets some of what she wants, and more.
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Review
"This inventive debut doesn't imitate the traditional British academic comedy but, rather, forges an identity all its own." Kirkus Reviews, Starred
"Gillian Cormier-Brandenburg is a romantic heroine unlike any other...Save Your Own is a keeper." USA Today
"Elisabeth Brink hooks the reader...and we start to pull for [Gillian] in this colorful 'ugly duckling to swan' story." Boston Globe
"A smashing debut -- hilarious, smart, and charming...One of the most original characters I've encountered in recent fiction..."--Stephen McCauley, author of Object of My Affection and The Man of the House.
"Sly, inventive, filled with irony and laughs and truth." -Susan Straight, author of A Million Nightingales and High-Wire Moon.
"A brutally honest and truly funny first novel by a writer of immense talent." -Peter Orner, author of The Second Coming of Mavala Shikonga
"Ultra-funny, super-sexy, and wickedly smart, with a philosophical heart that beats with furious, mystical passion." -Terri Giuliano Long, author of In Leah’s Wake
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.