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What's the Girl Worth? [Hardcover]

Christina Fitzpatrick (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 30, 2002

In this emotionally charged first novel, meet Catherine Kelly, a young cocktail waitress on the brink of her first trip alone to Madrid, Spain. From the beginning she is a feisty young woman, hard-edged and honest; yet as she leaves a world she knows and enters one she does not, a softer side comes through, a self-conscious vulnerability.

The most monumental loss in her life, her father abandoning her as a child, is revealed slowly as she navigates her way through the city of Madrid, through its heat-filled splendor, its oldworld cobblestone neighborhoods, its crammed, car-filled streets, its grandiose Palacio Real, which sits outside her window like a vision of perfection.

In her detailed reflections about her father, Catherine remembers a man who was charming and alcoholic, a man who regularly took his seven-year-old daughter to a bar and played games with her, amused her -- who instilled her with such adoration, such comfort, that she will spend the rest of her life, once he leaves, forever pining for him.

In the distant world of Madrid, Catherine finds an almost equaled symbiosis with an amusing older man named Esteban, who serves as her Spanish host. He introduces her to the glamorous city, to its culture and nightlife, and encourages her to revel in the exhilaration, the miraculous thrill, of being young and far from home. It is only after Esteban makes a certain disturbing proposal that Catherine ends up calling home and prompting an emotionally explosive visit from her father.

Christina Fitzpatrick's new novel explores the effects of a parent's abandonment on a child in spare, masterful prose. These conflicts demonstrate with luminous intensity what it means for a young woman to finally face the father whom she has missed and forever hoped for, the father who is as foreign to her as this newfound country, the beautiful, bright world of Spain.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Conflict between mother and daughter is a staple of fiction today. But conflict between father and daughter the core of Fitzpatrick's absorbing if long-winded first novel (after the story collection Where We Lived) is less frequently dissected and certainly not with the sharpness Fitzpatrick brings to the project. Her narrator and protagonist, Catherine Kelly, is putting herself through Boston University by working as a cocktail waitress. Wary of men because her father left her when she was a child, she shares an apartment with the only man she can get close to, an adoring and adorably fey gay man. The year she turns 20, Catherine takes a summer internship in Madrid. The job is negligible, but her roommates are charming, introducing Catherine to their circle of friends, who sweep her up into Madrid's nightlife. But halfway through her stay, her father shows up, and in the week he visits, Catherine begins to know, and to confront, him. Fitzpatrick ably weaves scenes from Catherine's past through those set in Madrid, building suspense in a story that could have become a travel journal. With incisive description and biting, lively dialogue, Fitzpatrick nails her characters, especially the men in Catherine's life. Both Harlan, the gay man Fitzpatrick rescues from stereotype, and Catherine's father, with his toupee and Aqua Net, are unforgettable. Moreover, Fitzpatrick captures precisely the peculiarities of bar life, while never veering far from her themes: how men value women and how Catherine values men. Fitzpatrick does go on, however: too many bars and far too many headlong sentences explaining Catherine's thoughts. As a witness and narrator, though, Catherine is completely credible, which is why the reader keeps reading and cheering her on.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Fitzpatrick's first novel follows quickly on the heels of her short story collection, Where We Lived. Here, the protagonist is Catherine Kelly, a twentysomething undergraduate at Boston University who works several nights a week as a cocktail waitress. She goes to Spain for a summer internship in public relations, and through a series of flashbacks, we learn about her gay male roommate in Boston, the alcoholic father who has been absent from her life since her childhood, and her uncomfortable relationships with men. While the flashbacks are skillfully interwoven, readers will soon tire of the narrator's immature, artless prose (she "felt so lucky, it was pathetic") and limited insight. Catherine prides herself on making a new start in Spain, unaware that her behavior hasn't changed: she is still squandering her time in bars with unpleasant men. Her depiction of Spain is limited to a catalog of nightclub interiors, drink orders, and clothing descriptions. Finally, her father appears for a week-long visit and reconciliation. Catherine takes him to several bars, of course, but at least they get to a museum. A marginal purchase for light fiction collections. Reba Leiding, James Madison Univ. Libs., Harrisonburg, VA
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Harper; First Edition edition (July 30, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060199105
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060199104
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.7 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,007,783 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A book to relate to but still dream with, November 25, 2002
This review is from: What's the Girl Worth? (Hardcover)
I'm not much on review writing, but after reading this book I felt compelled. The story of 20 year old Catherine's journey halfway around the world to "find herself" could have easily turned into a travelogue. It didn't. If you happen to be looking for a tourist's guide to Spain, I would recommond Fodor's... not this novel. What it did turn into is the story of a very real girl who is battling with the same demons many of us do... self image, past relationships, the desire to make the right decisions.

I was thrilled to find a protagonist I could relate to for once. The girl has issues... She knows she has issues, but she is a little confused about what those issues are... and as a refreshing change, those issues do not involve the family fortune, finding a new husband to finance a Park Avenue penthouse, or terminal illness. Those issues do involve being a child of divorce and alcoholism, and an all consuming need to succeed on her own, emotionally and financially. It is that need that we see constantly driving Catherine as she navigates her way through the unfamiliar territory of Madrid.

For me, this was a five star novel; however, I have to admit that Fitzpatrick can be a bit long winded at times. For the lines I decided to skip over here and there because they seemed a bit irrelevant, I have deducted one star. Also in the spirit of fairness, I should caution that this is not a "feel good" novel. Although I wouldn't necessarily characterize it as "dark", it is a bit moody, and does not wrap everything up in a nice, neat bow at the end as many would prefer for a novel to do.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars What the girl's worth remains the question, November 29, 2002
This review is from: What's the Girl Worth? (Hardcover)
Engulfing Christina's treats in just two days, I long for more. What's the girl worth? I'm thinking a lot. While a pretty girl in a strange land always makes for story, a dark western eye's subtle slice through Europe is entriguing. Ms. Fitzpatrick offers the sol y sombra of Madrid, battling her amorous and paternal demons with the distilled emotion and stabbing sincerity of a matador. While her problems are salt of the earth, her texture is sublime. Although she may fall at times, you'll want to lift her up. I can't wait to lift her up again.
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4.0 out of 5 stars The Girl is Worth Four Stars, January 7, 2009
This review is from: What's the Girl Worth? (Hardcover)
The novel What's the Girl Worth? written by Christina Fitzpatrick is worth four stars. It's a story about Catherine, cocktail waitress by night and college student by day, who takes a summer internship in Madrid, Spain. While in Spain she learned about Spanish culture as well as herself.
I really liked this book because through the plot the reader learns about Spanish culture. During her trip Catherine went to a bull fight accompanied by her father. It was very descriptive, making you feel for the bulls. Most things are more laid back in Spain. In the story Catherine and her friends go out to bars and clubs all the time. During Catherine's father's visit he went with them to these places because everything was more mellow then they are back in America. Also in Madrid they have siesta everyday which is a time for resting or relaxing. Stores and restaurants close and everything is quiet and peaceful. L liked how everybody does this at the same time every day.
Through Catherine's journey in Spain, she also had a personal journey. She overcame and accepted things about her father. I liked how in accepting these things from the past, she also learned new things about herself.
I really enjoyed reading this book and I would recommend it.
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First Sentence:
My first day in Madrid was on a Sunday. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Christina Fit, Juan Carlos, Kansas Katy, Palacio Real, Mars Bar, Blue Lagoon, Auntie Joy, Puerta del Sol, United States, Christina Fiqpatrick, Aqua Net, Catherine Kelly, Plaza Mayor, Rachel Hunter, Rob Roy, Rye Beach, Catedral de la Almudena, Dearest Doll, Johnny Walker Black, Oly Grail, Paseo del Prado, The Assassin, World Cup
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