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| Clown Girl: A Novel | 
enlarge | Author: Monica Drake Creator: Chuck Palahniuk Publisher: Hawthorne Books Category: Book
List Price: $15.95 Buy New: $9.36 You Save: $6.59 (41%)
New (32) Used (15) Collectible (7) from $9.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 40 reviews Sales Rank: 20125
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 336 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.5 x 0.8
ISBN: 0976631156 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780976631156 ASIN: 0976631156
Publication Date: January 4, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: BRAND NEW
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Product Description
Clown Girl lives in Baloneytown, a seedy neighborhood where drugs, balloon animals, and even rubber chickens contribute to the local currency. Against a backdrop of petty crime, she struggles to live her dreams, calling on cultural masters Charlie Chaplin, Kafka, and da Vinci for inspiration. In an effort to support herself and her layabout performance-artist boyfriend, Clown Girl finds herself unwittingly transformed into a "corporate clown," trapping herself in a cycle of meaningless, high-paid gigs that veer dangerously close to prostitution. Monica Drake has created a novel that riffs on the high comedy of early film stars — most notably Chaplin and W. C. Fields — to raise questions of class, gender, economics, and prejudice. Resisting easy classification, this debut novel blends the bizarre, the humorous, and the gritty with stunning skill.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 35 more reviews...
What a great debut novel - watch out Chuck February 2, 2007 25 out of 34 found this review helpful
So you all probably know that Monica workshopped with Chuck Palahniuk, and he refers to her in the intro of "Clown Girl" as the funnier, sexier, darker writer. I really enjoyed her book, it was indeed funny, laugh out loud funny, as well as twisted, dark, sexy and a blast to read. When I look back on 2006 I think it is one of the best books I read, one of the few I LOVED. I look forward to more of her work, and if you haven't gotten this book yet, get it right now.
send in the clowns, where are the clowns... March 24, 2007 24 out of 32 found this review helpful
Chuck has nothing to worry about here. While Drake has a great voice and a vivid imagination this book just ran out of steam. It probably would have worked better as a short story. I found Nita's self-imposed hardships to be quite grating after about 100 pages and there were still 200 pages of the same to go. It all got a bit repetitious and obvious after awhile. I also didn't find the book funny. I didn't laugh once. I have to add that I am in no way the sharpest tool in the shed but even I saw the ending coming a mile away.
Probably the worst book I have ever "read" April 13, 2007 14 out of 35 found this review helpful
This book is actually unreadable. I tried to force myself to finish it, but I put it down forever with only about 50 pages left to go. This is a story about feeling sorry for yourself and never doing anything to improve your situation. I only picked it up because Chuck Palahniuk wrote the introduction. Warning - don't ever buy a book that Chuck Palahniuk has recommended. He's always ranting and raving about female authors from Portland. Every time they end up being not necessarally bad writers, but boring writers who seem to think they are a lot more clever than they really are. I don't know if he's trying to present himself as not just another macho guy, or sleeping with them. Either way, they're never any good.
A Superb Truth for the Baloneytown and Rubber Chicken in All of Us ... April 23, 2007 11 out of 20 found this review helpful
So Monica Drake's debut, Clown Girl is truly amazing. Baloneytown is the hometown of Nita (aka: Sniffles the Clown). It is not anytown America ... it is really an unreal world ... surreal in almost every way except its constant presence of reality-seeped pain, strife, and struggle.
This book took me weeks to read ... a rare occurence for me. It took me this long not because I was not enjoying myself but because I found myself identifying with Sniffles more than I think I have ever identified with another character. I did not find myself identifying with her religious icon balloon forming, her rubber nose ... actually until now I was afraid of clowns. Though I still do not want to meet a clown in a dark alley or in my dark dreams anytime soon ... but I do feel I have lost a rubber chicken, at least metaphorically.
Sniffles' displaced and hopeless feelings, loss, and complete confusion within her world, as well as her bouts of sadness was what sometimes made this a tough read for me. This book was chock full of great truth and an ugly-beauty that is rare and priceless in contemporary fiction. Drake's writing style and quirky, even sometimes other-worldly observations always kept me extremely excited, entertained, and constantly moved.
It is also a book I will value because of its existence in my life when so many changes were happening -- discoveries and finally maybe finding that rubber chicken I (and all of us) so desire to find.
Utterly forgettable April 6, 2007 9 out of 13 found this review helpful
A couple years ago I discovered a masterpiece of modern literature: a novel called "Geek Love" by Katherine Dunne. That novel was unique in its central premise, and rife with fascinating characters, truly bizarre events, and compelling, wonderful language. Basically, it had everything that this novel, "Clown Girl," so sorely lacks. Of course it's rare for a novel to have the same visceral impact that that aforementioned book has, and I wouldn't have even thought to bring it up if I hadn't noticed so many fellow reviewers drawing comparisons between the two.
Whereas "Geek Love" is a gripping family saga that masterfully juggles two seperate plot threads and makes the reader equally interested in both, "Clown Girl" is a fairly simple, humdrum, expanded short story. Sniffles, the protagonist, is a sad clown who is lonely and feels alienated and unappreciated and suffers from ostracism on account of her trade. She is in love with Rex, another clown, though the relationship is hardly where she would like it to be. Her clown colleagues don't share her passion for "art," and instead prefer to do corporate clown gigs for fetishists, where the big bucks apparently are. She's a fan of Kafka, and because of her sensitive temperament, she yearns and yearns and yearns. Oh, and she suffers from "heart" problems -- physically, of course.
The novel is so extraordinarily cliched and predictable that I kept reading mainly just to see how much of what I saw coming two-thirds of the way through would turn out the way I expected. (There were no surprises.) As I read page after insipid page, I kept wondering: Is it that the writer is from Portland that people feel the need to compare this novel to the pitch-perfect "Geek Love"? Surely it's not a comaparison predicated on originality. If the protagonist had been a ballet dancer rather than a clown (or something like that) and the rest of the story stayed the same, this would read like a trite, flaccid, made-for-TV movie.
And what a shame, too. I was really excited about it.
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