A passionate coming-of-age novel reminscent of John Irving, about how a young girl copes in an eccentric family after the accidental death of her parents at a funfair.
When six-year-old Elray reaches up to touch the moon in the Tunnel of Love, she narrowly escapes a freak electric current that claims the lives of both her parents. Suddenly orphaned, she is left stunned and mute, until two loving but undomesticated uncles step in.
Cross-dressing Uncle Ajax insists on being addressed as 'Aunt'; Uncle Harwood is a macho photographer, full of swagger and fond of drink. When the deceptively sweet Irish lawyer Rena moves in to mount a lucrative lawsuit against the fairground, the eccentric household becomes the very model of family life reinvented.
By:
Leslie Marshall
Imprint: Doubleday
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 198mm,
Width: 127mm,
Spine: 25mm
Weight: 283g
ISBN: 9780552771900
ISBN 10: 0552771902
Pages: 416
Publication Date: 01 September 2004
Recommended Age: From 0 years
Audience:
General/trade
,
ELT Advanced
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
When six-year-old Elray stands up to touch the moon, she narrowly escapes a freakish electric current that claims the lives of both her parents while riding through the amusement park Tunnel of Love. Suddenly orphaned, she is left stunned and mute, until two loving but not-so-domesticated uncles step in to take charge. One is her cross-dressing uncle Ajax, who insists on being addressed as 'aunt'; the other is Uncle Harwood, a macho photographer, full of swagger and fond of a drink. When the deceptively sweet Irish lawyer Rena moves in to mount a lucrative lawsuit against the fairground, the eccentric household becomes the very model of family life re-invented. Outwardly full of adventure and thrill-seeking energy, Elray stores her grief deep inside. With young Raoul she meets her match. In pursuit of invincibility, they perform reckless acts of bravery and dangerous rituals that lead them into underground crypts and across immense rivers. Together, they begin to unearth the essential truths about courage, strength, and the transforming power of love and family. Bursting with exuberance and vibrancy, Leslie Marshall lures us into a child's world of imagination and lawlessness, a place in which all sense of normality is lost, until it is time to fall in love. In the unique character of Elray Mayhew she has surely created one of literature's most unforgettable heroines.
Leslie Marshall is a freelance journalist and has written for The Washington Post, Real Simple and InStyle Magazine, where she is still contributing editor. She grew up in Washington D. C. and now lives in New York. This is her first novel.
Reviews for A Girl Could Stand Up
'Leslie Marshall ... is the Homer of dysfunctional modern family life. This is the best first novel I've read in years' -- Edmund White 'An extraordinary journey through the life of an extraordinary family, chronicled by a child-woman you will not forget' -- Anne Rivers Siddons 'A lovely tale of teenage love and companionship in a world where all adults seem insane' * Time Out * 'This quirky novel is a must for Kate Atkinson and John Irving fans who are fond of a surreal read' * Glamour * 'An atmosphere of crazy cheerfulness...undercut by moments of poignancy...a pleasure to read' * Daily Telegraph *