Unimaginable Zero Summer by Leslie Stella

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  • Pub. Date: April 2005
  • Available for download via Wi-Fi and 3G
  • 288pp
     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: April 2005
    • Publisher: Crown Publishing Group
    • Format: eBook, 288pp

    Synopsis

    Perhaps you too have experienced the nausea brought on by the arrival of an invitation to a high school reunion.

    Bookstore clerk and culture junker Verity Presti will soon attend her fifteenth reunion with her boyfriend, the unfortunately but aptly named Charlie Brown, who lives with his parents while training to be an urban shaman—a modern-day medicine man somewhat capable of exorcising ghosts from apartments and cubicles, predicting baseball scores, and channeling lost pets. Verity, angst-ridden and burdened with fifteen years of magnificent failure, will be reunited with Craig and Carolyn, sickeningly perfect high school sweethearts, married now and perfectly sick of each other; Verity’s former crush Stan and his wife, Laurel, a frustrated author of angry haikus; and Will, a rage-aholic KJ (that’s “karaoke jockey”) whose only soft spot is the one he still has for Verity. A growing anxiety permeates the round of cocktail parties that precedes the reunion, causing old affections and animosities to boil over and threaten the dubious complacency of these seven lovable losers.

    With her trademark sarcasm and uncanny ability to skewer the oddities of contemporary hipster life, Stella has created a cast of endearingly eccentric characters who embody the insecurities and foibles that all of us—former prom desperados, band nerds, the burnout brigade, and loner stiffs—have and hope nobody else will notice.

    Kirkus Reviews

    In her third outing, Stella (The Easy Hour, 2003, etc.) uses the high-school reunion as backdrop for a comedy about social misfits, thwarted ambitions and the ties that bind. It's just about time for 33-year-old bookstore clerk and thrift store maven Verity Presti's 15-year reunion, to be held in the aptly named Chicago suburb of Downer's Grove at summer's end. As the reunion approaches, a loosely connected group of Verity's high-school friends throws a series of dinner parties, where they reevaluate their choices and eye each other's lives with some envy. Among them are Verity's boyfriend, Charlie Brown, a long-time temp seeking a deeper calling; Will, a lonely, often angry karaoke jockey with an unrequited crush on Verity; Stan, Verity's unrequited high-school crush, now a middle manager married to an unfulfilled haiku performance artist named Laurel; and Craig and Carolyn, high-school sweethearts with a high-school-aged child of their own. There's mild suspense: Will Verity want to leave Charlie for Stan? Will Laurel want to have an affair with Charlie, who, she feels, supports her poetry more than Stan does? And, somewhat unrelatedly, what on earth will happen to Verity's father, the lonely swinger dentist who is now dating a vampire lifestylist? In the end, the reunion is a bit of a red herring: Stella is more interested in allowing her odd but somewhat charming characters to play out a goofy, if ultimately redemptive, dance of humor and even of joy taken in the quirks and broken places in their lives. It's no surprise that Verity, with her penchant for rescuing old furniture and photos of strangers, is the star here. A comforting if sometimes cartoonish riff on Gen-X lives.

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    Biography

    Leslie Stella is the author of The Easy Hour and Fat Bald Jeff and has been nominated for a 2004 Pushcart Prize in short fiction. She lives in Chicago with her husband and son.

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