Pretending to Dance / Diane Chamberlain.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781250010742 (hardback) :
- Physical Description: 339 pages : map ; 25 cm.
- Edition: First edition.
- Publisher: New York : St. Martin's Press, 2015.
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Family secrets > Fiction. Adoption > Fiction. Life change events > Fiction. San Diego (California) > Fiction. North Carolina > Fiction. |
Genre: | Psychological fiction. Women's fiction. Domestic fiction. |
Available copies
- 28 of 29 copies available at Sitka.
- 1 of 1 copy available at Elkford Public Library. (Show preferred library)
Holds
- 0 current holds with 0 total copies.
Other Formats and Editions
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Holdable? | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Elkford Public Library | FC CHA (Text) | 35170000384438 | Adult Fiction | Volume hold | Available | - |
Bibliotheque St. Claude Library | FIC CHA (Text) | 36725000025569 | Adult Fiction | Volume hold | Available | - |
Bren Del Win Centennial Library | F Chamberlain (Text) | 36320000322727 | Adult Fiction | Volume hold | Available | - |
Castlegar Public Library | FIC CHA (Text) | 35146001937309 | Fiction | Volume hold | Available | - |
Chetwynd Public Library | Fic Cha (Text) | 35222000921733 | Adult Fiction | Volume hold | Available | - |
Creston Public Library | FIC CHA (Text)
Acquisition Type: New |
35140900004329 | Fiction | Volume hold | Available | - |
Fort Nelson Public Library | FIC CHA (Text) | 35246000859528 | Adult Fiction | Volume hold | Available | - |
Glenwood and Souris Regional Library | F Chamber 2015 (Text) | 367640000139402 | Adult Fiction | Volume hold | Available | - |
Greenwood Public Library | Fic CHA (Text) | 35141000190489 | Adult Fiction | Volume hold | Available | - |
Hudson's Hope Public Library | FIC FIC CHA (Text) | BHH045107 | Adult Fiction | Volume hold | Available | - |
- Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2015 October #2
In 1990, Molly Arnette was like any other 14-year-old girl, yearning for a pair of purple Doc Martens. Her world was just starting to open up beyond her family's neighborhood in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina. Decades later, Molly looks back on the summer of her 14-year-old self as the summer when everything changed. As a grown woman, Molly wonders if she's strong enough to proceed with the adoption application she and her husband have started and whether it's time to let him know the truth about her own childhood. Chamberlain has teenage Molly and grown-up Molly narrate alternating chapters, piecing parallel stories together. Exploring the thrilling feelings of first love, the depths of teenage angst, and the difficult decisions families and spouses make together, Pretending to Dance is a multilayered, poignant novel. Chamberlain writes knowledgeably about seeing a family member confront a degenerative illness, the power of therapy, and the hardship of loss. Reminiscent of a Sarah Dessen or Sharon Creech novel, Pretending to Dance proves that a coming-of-age story can happen at any time in your life. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews. - Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2015 August #1
A prospective adoptive mother examines her past and her conscience prior to embarking on her parental journey. Molly and her husband, Aidan, involuntarily childless attorneys in San Diego, are going through the fraught process of qualifying to adopt. Molly, 38, has a degree of trepidation about how "open" this adoption is expected to be: is the birth mother, Sienna, expecting to be part of her child's life in perpetuity? Molly's misgivings are understandable; she herself is the product of a family in which her birth mother, Amalia, lived close by, and she witnessed the discomfort such proximity created for her adoptive mother, Nora. Molly has not told her husband why she's now estranged from both Amalia, who's dying, and Noraâin fact, she's told him almost nothing about her past. The present narrative is interspersed with chapters flashing back 24 years to Morrison Ridge, a large tract of family-owned land in the wooded hills near Asheville, North Carolina: Molly is 14, living with her mother, Nora, and her father, Graham, a psychotherapist who has invented a new behavioral regimen, "Pretend Therapy." Multiple sclerosis has left Graham paralyzed from the neck down. Molly is a bookish, precocious teen who types Graham's manuscripts and accompanies him on book tours. However when she falls under the influence of a classmate, Stacy, who introduces her to older boys, the plot takes a major detour through teen-novel territory: Molly's main preoccupation, enabled by a Judy Blume novel no less, is now losing her virginity. In the meantime, Graham and his relatives are wrangling over the fate of the Ridge: one faction wants to sell to a developer while others, including Molly's grandmother and Graham, want to keep the land pristine. While the family argues and Molly's hormones run wild, something else is going on that will make for the explosive revelation at novel's end. Marred by excessive sentimentality and superfluous exposition that dilutes t h e drama. Copyright Kirkus 2015 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved. - Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2015 May #2
Chamberlain (The Silent Sister) adds to her stack of popular works about seesawing family dynamics with a novel centered on 14-year-old Molly Arnette, who lives on 100 acres in the Blue Ridge Mountains with her therapist father and adoptive mother; her biological mother lives nearby. Summer 1990 starts out promisingly, but the adults have plans that will upend Molly's world.
[Page 52]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. - School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2015 December
Molly and her husband, Aidan, want to adopt a baby. A young pregnant girl who wants to give her child up thinks that they may be the couple to become her baby's parents. But though Molly knows that she wants this baby, she is also unsure about being an adoptive mother. Her past looms close and hides a secret that she fears will unhinge not only this adoption but possibly her marriage. Alternating chapters tell the story of Molly's life during the summer she turned 14 in her small North Carolina town, juxtaposed with chapters about her life today as a lawyer in San Diego. She was raised in a loving family with a pharmacist mother and a therapist father with multiple sclerosis. That summer, Molly befriends a new girl who introduces her to an older boy, and subsequently drugs and sex. When a devastating event occurs and her beloved father dies, Molly is unable to reconcile the actions of her family. She is unable to trust them and leaves them behind, first for boarding schools and then for her adult life in San Diego. It is only her fear that the past is beginning to influence her present that pushes her to deal with those earlier events. VERDICT An excellent choice for mature teens who will follow Molly's burgeoning maturity as she tries to keep her father close and safe.âConnie Williams, Petaluma High School, CA
[Page 131]. (c) Copyright 2015 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.