In her first novel, Gay Walley weaves two stories into a seamless narrative--a woman's quest for love, and the drunken, vagabond childhood she endured with her father.
Raised on a barstool, Charlee spends her youth drinking in the dark dives of New England and Montreal with a father who flees from woman to woman. As an adult, in one of her father's haunts, she encounters the man whose flaws and attractions will make her face every emotion that confounded her dad. She longs for companionship, but from her father she has learned to trust only her own will and crave solitude. Can she overcome a life of defiant independence and her distrust of affection?
Walley's daring prose style allows the writer to make Charlee's rough but endearing past immediate and vital in her present.
"I often think the truth," Charlee supposes, "was that my father lost me in a card game. He was losing; indeed, he lost everything. The men are all sitting around the bar, and this card game is a secret, all-consuming vice of my father's. He will do anything to keep in the game. And he says, 'Okay, I've got nothing except my daughter. When she's eighteen, you can have her. You can take her and do whatever the hell you like.'"
Populated with tough, brilliant characters who crisscross New England, Strings Attached is a novel about the search for love, about the possibilities and impossibilities of that quest. Walley says, "These searching characters fall away and toward each other, as we do in every love affair, and come to their ultimate truths."
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As dark as this childhood might be, her father at least has his own brand of devil-may-care charm. "You're a lucky girl that you're learning how to be with people, and how to have some fun," he tells her, and for a moment, at least, one sees how this might make a certain kind of drunk's sense. In contrast, Charlee's joy-free relationship with her lover Peter sometimes reads like a marathon session of emotional processing. "All you can do," he tells her, "is mouth the word no. It exhausts me." Quite. Add in jarring jumps backward and forward in time as well as unpredictable shifts between first and third person, and Gay Walley's first novel can feel as disjointed and unsettling as Charlee's roller-coaster emotions. Nonetheless, there are passages here that ring poignant and true, as when she first tries to go sober: "And how was she supposed to tell time without drinks?" One feels guilty wishing Charlee back in the clutches of her dear old dad, but Strings Attached somehow feels most lucid when it's under the influence. --Chloe Byrne
A lyric story of love’s stranglehold on a father and daughter
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Book Description Hardcover. Condition: New. Seller Inventory # Abebooks382199
Book Description Condition: New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! 0.6. Seller Inventory # Q-1578061997