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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gale Zoe Garnett is a brilliant writer,
By H. L. L. (CA, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Visible Amazement (Hardcover)
I still have an essay, which I've saved from many years back, that Gale Zoe Garnett wrote for the TORONTO STAR newspaper, about Gordon Liddy. She wrote it when she was a distinguished member of the judges panel at The Toronto Film Festival, which also happened to be the same year that Gordon Liddy announced to the world that he was an actor. I believe Mr. Liddy had recently been released from jail where he'd served time for doing illegal things for his boss, President Nixon...Even thinking about this devilishly tongue in cheek article makes me shake with laughter and I have been a fan of her writing ever since. I've read Ms. Garnett's article, about Gordon Liddy, the actor, to many people over the years and have thrilled to the satisfying shrieks of laughter it elicited.In her first novel, VISIBLE AMAZEMENT, my admiration for Ms. Garnett's writing increases. Her heroine, thirteen year old Roanne, is someone I totally identify with, and someone anyone can identify with; 'I think when you move around a lot and don't relate really well with kids your own age, books can be an important alternative to suicide.' (VISIBLE AMAZEMENT pg 23) Don't let Roanne's age fool you--this is a woman in the making, no question about it, with all the attendant confusion about sex and desire and 'relationships.' Roanne's journey made me laugh out loud and often. I laughed so hard I cried. Ms. Garnett has a gift for describing the absolutely ridiculous in all of us. I am an avid reader of detective novels. I adore detective fiction and most especially, Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe series. Rex Stout is a globally recognized master of mystery and what I like best about his writing style is his breeziness and casualness. He tosses off barbs and wit like a Dorothy Parker. Ms. Garnett posesses the same skill. She can write the way Cary Grant could act. Effortlessly and without a care in the world and yet, she can break our hearts as well as make us laugh. This is writing at it's best. Nothing heavy handed here--all wit and therefore highly skilled. You'd do yourself a great service by curling up with this book, (a few hours will get you through it as it's only a couple of hundred pages,) and letting Roanne's journey envelop you for a while until you come to realize you're also thinking of your own life's journey right along with hers. Ms. Garnett brings to life the beautiful California coastline, a cartoon drawing dwarf, a dashing French photographer, a beautiful Malibu princess, a rolicking, British rock band, and a time in America in the late 60's before MTV, computers and Nike, 'pre-corporate' as Mike Meyers has said, where everything in life seemed new and exciting. She has beautifully drawn Roanne's fragile, teenage time of transition which she calls '"on the point"...When you're not where you were and you don't know yet where you're going to be instead.' (page 75, VISIBLE AMAZEMENT) This book is for anyone who is on any kind of a journey--and that's just about everybody I know. Bravo, Ms. Garnett, on this brilliant debut. Please keep 'em coming.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
visibly AMAZING,
This review is from: Visible Amazement (Hardcover)
I begged my dad to buy me this book because of the cover and the review on the back that called Gale Zoe Garnett, the book's author, "a female Salinger." While Roanne is not exactly Holden Caulfield in a bra, I could totally relate to what she was going through. Roanne Chappell is a 14-year old Canadian girl who feels suffocated by her artist mother. She wants to be known by something other than "Del's daughter." She hungers for a world of her own, an existence entirely separate from her mother's. Roanne runs away to the home of D.D.A.(Didi), a renowned cartoonist whom she idolizes, and who turns out to be a lovable, gay, French dwarf. As Roanne continues her adventure, travelling to California and even swinging by Mexico, Roanne meets quite a number of unusual characters, including Pascal, Didi's photographer brother, Gabe, an old friend from "clown school," and Gilbey Tarr, a gorgeous, Southern "teenage goddess from outer space," who soon becomes Roanne's best friend. These people all help Roanne learn important life lessons, as well as find the wonderful individual hidden from beneath her mother's shadow. Roanne is unlike any character ever written. I think it is wrong to liken her to Holden Caulfield, for she does not possess Holden's jaded view of the world. Roanne truly is "visibly amazed" by everything she sees. Although the book's ending was quite abrupt, and the period in which the book is set was not clearly illustrated, I still consider this one of my favorite books. Like Roanne, I often feel the need to run away and forge a world that I can truly call my own. Roanne is not afraid to explore unknown territories, such as her sexuality. You'll be glad the book is written in first person, for Roanne's original blend of coined expressions and Canadian jargon will have you laughing out loud. Read the book. It will truly amaze you.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Worth more than any of us are paying, lol.,
By May Tyler (Canada) - See all my reviews
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