Playing with the Grown-ups by Sophie Dahl

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(Hardcover)

  • Publisher: Doubleday Publishing
  • Pub. Date: April 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9780385524612
  • Sales Rank: 85,493
  • 288pp
 
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Synopsis

For Kitty, growing up at Hay House amongst bluebell woods and doting relations is heaven. But for her mother, the restless Marina, a bohemian beauty who paints and weeps with alacrity, this comfortable domesticity cannot provide the novelty and excitement she craves. Marina is utterly beguiling, but more often than not Kitty can only gaze on her antics with awe and toe-curling trepidation.
When Swami-ji, Marina’s Guru, sees Marina’s future in New York, the family relocates, leaving Kitty exiled in a colorless boarding school. Reprieve comes in the form of the Guru’s summons to the ashram; but then, just as Kitty is approaching enlightenment, she and Marina are off again, leaving for an England that is now fast and unfamiliar. This time no god, man, or martini can staunch Marina’s hunger for a happiness that proves all too elusive. And Kitty, turning fifteen, must choose: whether to play dangerous games with the grown-ups or begin to put herself first.
Playing with the Grown-ups is an enchanting novel about growing up in a loving, utterly chaotic household; it is also hilarious, heartbreaking, and scandalous. The offbeat and often comic adventures of the free-spirited heroines—Marina and Kitty alike—will remind readers of Breakfast at Tiffany’s. With her magnificent talent for storytelling and creating unconventional characters, Sophie Dahl ably carries on the literary legacy of her grandfather, the beloved children’s book author, Roald Dahl.

Kirkus Reviews

A slightly autobiographical first novel from Dahl, granddaughter of Roald, and a one-time fashion model and current contributing editor at Men's Vogue. Childhood has been both unconventional and idyllic for Kitty. She lives at bucolic Hay House with doting grandparents, two vivacious young aunts, a brother, a sister and their beloved nanny. And then there's Marina, her mother and the center of her universe. Marina is a painter and a bon vivant, as mercurial as she is beautiful. When Marina falls under the spell of a guru, she sends Kitty away to boarding school. Later, Marina will uproot Kitty yet again, taking her away from England to America, and, later still, to the swami's ashram. As she struggles to forge an identity for herself, Kitty must contend not only with the inevitable upheavals of adolescence, but also with her mother's increasing instability. Dahl tells Kitty's story in a voice that is both unremittingly cheerful and oddly distant, and her abundant and occasionally well-crafted similes don't quite add up to real literary substance. Every incident here is obscured by the pixie dust of adorable metaphors, and Dahl cannot seem to resist the urge to make everyone too preciously quirky to be true. The eccentric coming-of-age story is hardly a new one, and this particular entry lacks the depth and texture that might have made it compelling. Cloying and weightless. Agent: Ed Victor/Ed Victor Ltd.

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Biography

SOPHIE DAHL lives in England. In 2003 she and the illustrator Anne Morris published a small book, The Man with the Dancing Eyes. Ms. Dahl has written for the Guardian and Vogue, and is at present a contributing editor at Men’s Vogue.

Customer Reviews

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  • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

Playing with the Grown-upsby Anonymous

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July 28, 2008: Let's get to the point quickly, just because Sophie Dahl is the grand daughter of Roald Dahl doesn't mean she's only living off of the name & has no real talent of her own, actually the woman has her own unique writing style & it is quite good, rather what's lacking in her debut is a great plot. With Dahl's modern-fairy-tale like prose we're presented with a part enchanted and part horrible childhood of Kitty, the grand daughter of charming English eccentrics, but the daughter of a beautiful mentally unstable hippie mother. The antics Marina puts Kitty through like always sending her off to a new school just when she starts to get comfortable at her current one or dating alcoholics, makes anyone love their own mother more than normal. Yet Kitty's idolization of her mother never fully falters, and due to Dahl's whimsical way with words we can sympathize too. It's just that as Marina's escapades get more grandiose and therefore Kitty gets more out of control too, the enjoyable story turns into an obnoxious loop of stuff we're read before. The ending is especially abrupt and dissatisfying. Dahl has her own writing talent, but her somewhat autobiographical novel needs to step away from her hectic family life for once.

Playing with the Grown-upsby Anonymous

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April 13, 2008: Playing with the Grownups is a GenX coming-of-age story told from the point of view of Kitty, a child born to an unmarried high school student who had an affair with a married man. This story is as much the story of Kitty's coming-of-age as it is a story of the coming-of-age of her mother, Marina. The story is told as a series of flashbacks Kitty has while traveling back to England to visit her hospitalized mother. Even outside of the flashback convention, the flow of the story tends to get a bit choppy and comes off reading less as a progressive accounting of Kitty's rather unconventional life and more like a series of snapshot-like short stories. The setting of the story moves back and forth between America and England as Marina desperately tries on a variety of widely different lifestyles trying to find the one that's a good fit for her - usually dragging her 3 children and a live-in nanny along with her - with the expected results.