Heartbreaker : a novel /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Dey, Claudia, author.
Edition:First U.S. edition.
Imprint:New York : Random House, [2018]
Description:260 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11686370
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9780525511731
0525511733
9781524798932
Summary:"Set in an isolated town founded decades ago by a charismatic cult leader, Heartbreaker is the story of a mysterious woman who abruptly disappears, and those who try to find her. At the intersection of The Handmaid's Tale and Twin Peaks, this is the wildly imaginative American debut of a prize-winning Canadian author. Why can't a woman be more than one person in a lifetime? It's been months since Billie Jean Fontaine left her bedroom, trapped alone by grief. But one night, out of the blue, she emerges and announces that she's going into town--but she never returns. In their remote northern town, which has been cut off from the world for decades, her husband and daughter undertake a frantic search for the beloved and beautiful Billie Jean. She is the only outsider ever to arrive in this strange town, sixteen years earlier. And now the residents wonder: has Billie Jean become the first person to leave, too? Told from three unforgettable perspectives--her daughter, her dog, and her mysterious friend--Heartbreaker is the electrifying portrait of a woman who has risked everything for freedom and love, and the secrets she leaves in her wake"--
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Dey (Stunt) brings readers into the unique world of "the territory," a secluded town in the upper reaches of North America founded by a charismatic cult leader. The 391 residents live in an infinitely extended 1985, listening to Billy Joel and watching Dallas reruns in complete seclusion from the outside world. After Pony Darlene Fontaine's mother leaves her and her father (known as "The Heavy"), Pony re-examines the rituals and conditions of her exile, while navigating her own girlhood. Subsequent chapters shift the perspective to the Fontaines' dog, and then Pony's crush, the boy known as Supernatural, as they join in the search for the vanished Billie Jean Fontaine. But it's not the plot, the characters, or even the premise that makes this novel so extraordinary-it's the voice, which is so utterly unusual and authentic as to seem like it's really coming from a world of total isolation, turning up glittering aphorisms such as "Complaint is a form of self-degradation. Hardship is a matter of perception." And yet, Pony's inner self is as complex and vivid as any teenage girl's; at one point she thinks, "I am the softest thing going." Dey strips away the trappings of modernity to show what humans truly are at base, while eschewing the usual cult narrative. The result is a whole-cloth, word-for-word triumph of imagination. Agent: Martha Webb, McDermid Agency. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review