Girls in Trucks by Katie Crouch

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: April 2008
  • 256pp
  • Sales Rank: 382,377

Reader Rating: (56 ratings)

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: April 2008
    • Publisher: Little, Brown & Company
    • Format: Hardcover, 256pp
    • Sales Rank: 382,377

    The Barnes & Noble Review

    Sarah Walters was born into the prim and proper debutante class of South Carolina, but that's as close as she ever comes to white-gloved gentility. The heroine of Katie Crouch's debut novel, Girls in Trucks, is a salty-tongued rebel who slips the bonds of a girlhood of dance lessons to find freedom in the cold and baffling North. There, Sarah loses her accent, her values, and, in sometimes sad and often spectacular fashion, her way in life. She had planned on greatness and instead has to settle for survival. Here's Sarah, halfway through the book, self-aware and still defiant: "I have made many mistakes in my life so far, the biggest of which, according to my mother, was leaving the South. Never mind the fact that I managed to spend three good years pining after a cruel man, that I have let a once promising career in journalism go, that I drink too much and have come to like my pot. I wouldn't say that I'm an addict, but try and take it away, and swear to God, I'll bite you like a snake." The story caroms from man to man and job to job, as Sarah struggles to make sense of her life. Just as it seems Crouch has written herself into a corner, she'll switch scenes, push forward or backward in time, and give herself a clean slate. It's a tricky little dance, and unlike our heroine, Crouch is up to it. From start to finish, she makes smart choices that keep the chick from derailing this often lovely bit of lit. --Veronique de Turenne

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    Synopsis

    Sarah Walters is a less-than-perfect debutante. She tries hard to follow the time-honored customs of the Charleston Camellia Society, as her mother and grandmother did, standing up straight in cotillion class and attending lectures about all the things that Camellias don't do. (Like ride with boys in pickup trucks).
    But Sarah can't quite ignore the barbarism just beneath all that propriety, and as soon as she can she decamps South Carolina for a life in New York City. There, she and her fellow displaced Southern friends try to make sense of city sophistication, to understand how much of their training applies to real life, and how much to the strange and rarefied world they've left behind.
    When life's complications become overwhelming, Sarah returns home to confront with matured eyes the motto "Once a Camellia, always a Camellia"- and to see how much fuller life can be, for good and for ill, among those who know you best.
    Girls in Trucks introduces a narrative voice that is astonishing and irresistible - a true, sweet, and wise voice that heralds the arrival of an exciting new talent.

    Publishers Weekly

    Katie Crouch reads her own book with expression, but she often doesn't do enough to differentiate character voices and doesn't even attempt a Southern accent for these Southern debutantes. More importantly, she lacks the narrator skill to surmount the challenges presented by her writing: unexpected leaps forward in time, skipping over important events, and inexplicably changing from first to third person in some chapters. A more experienced reader might have been able to bridge the transitions and make the audio feel seamless, but as it is, the audio comes across as choppy and often jarring, like a poorly-done abridgement (even though it is unabridged). In addition, when reading the last moment of the book, in which protagonist Sarah reflects on her life and future and what she's learned, Crouch sounds flat, as though she's simply reading aloud, rather than truly being Sarah thinking. Stick with the print version. A Little, Brown hardcover (Reviews, Jan. 28).
    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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    Biography

    Katie Crouch grew up in Charleston, South Carolina and studied writing at Brown and ColumbiaUniversities. She lives in San Francisco.

    Customer Reviews

    3 days wasted...by kuhlcat

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    January 19, 2010: This book is just terrible. I honestly can't fathom how this book got past the first editor's desk. The plot is the furthest thing from original; Southern, naive girl moves to New York City and becomes entangled in sex and drugs. The main character, Sarah, is mostly pathetic. She does nothing to better herself or her ways, and continues to whine for 200 pages about how she's addicted to bad men. The people that come in and out of her life are cardboard characters-- very flat and boring.

    The tense changes. Sometimes it's present tense. Sometimes it's past tense. Wasn't that one of the first thing a writer learns in Writing 101? Be consistent! Choose one or the other and stick with it. Not only that, but the point of view changes, too. First-person, third-person; one chapter is even in second person. Two chapters are devoted to characters that have nothing to do with Sarah's own personal story (the only relativity is one character is a friend and one is her mother) and do nothing to move things along. It's so confusing, and even now, after thinking about it, I still can't figure out why an author would do that to her readers.

    The end wasn't even worth it. It doesn't all tie together, and it didn't even seem like Sarah learned her lessons throughout the entire book. Things happened to characters that didn't really make sense. I don't want to go into too much detail (I hate including spoilers, though sometimes it is necessary) but I rolled my eyes when a couple of "revelations" came about.

    Go ahead. Read it. Join in the misery. But don't say I didn't warn you.

    Not What I Expectedby Anonymous

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    January 07, 2010: This book really disappointed me. Like the other reviews stated, it was nothing like what was described on the back of the cover. Overall, it was supremely depressing. The main character, Sarah, had no redeeming qualities (or common sense) and like another review said, never really progressed throughout the novel. I had to force myself to finish it, just because I cannot stand to leave a book unfinished. I wouldn't recommend this book to anyone.


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