Reviews

Avalon by Nell Zink

vickijustwantstoread's review against another edition

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3.0

I received Avalon by Nell Zink as a gifted copy from Penguin Random House. If you read a lot you get somewhat proficient at definition of words by context, but this book challenged me. That normally would be a turn off, but the story was just interesting enough to keep me going despite the need to look up words.

Bran (she) grew up in her step father's home/compound after her father ran off to Australia and then her mother decided to become a Buddhist an then died as well. Doug lived on family land with his father and his son. They had a type of landscape business growing topiary they sold to others. She was regulated to a lean to outside the house and they used her labor freely while she was in school. She made a few friends that she kept in contact with after graduation but except for Jay they kind of all went their separate ways in college. Bran had no chance to go to college. As far as she knew she was an illegal. She couldn't get a driver's license or plates and registration for her car. She couldn't file taxes. She couldn't get a regular job with no reportable experience. She decides to escape after a party at the family compound got out of hand and there was mention of her being auctioned off to one of her "grandfather's" friends. She goes to stay with the parents of one of her high school friends, Will, who is in college on the east coast. They try to encourage her to be on her own and get a real job or go to college. She meets one of her best friend's, Jay, new friends, Peter and many of decisions from then on revolve around him.

I enjoyed the arc of the story and Bran's struggle to define herself. I did not enjoy having to look up words I can't imagine a bunch of 18 year old's using on a regular basis.

sittingwishingreading's review against another edition

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lighthearted reflective tense medium-paced

3.0

rachel_athens's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark funny tense fast-paced

4.0

Bran's teenaged-life is a whirl of poverty, neglect, and downright abuse, but she doesn't remember any other way. In Avalon, Zink has given us a brutal coming-of-age story that is as bizarre and funny as it is raw. While Bran's mother leaving her for a Buddhist colony may be a pivotal first loss, living in a lean-to working at her common-law stepdad's plant nursery gives Bran plenty of motivation to escape. Thank goodness for her flamenco-obsessed best friend and a handful of high school friends. When everyone except Bran leaves for college, she's got to re-evaluate where she's going. Bran's one of the strongest girls I've read and you'll be rooting for her the whole time.

beepbeepbooks's review against another edition

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funny lighthearted medium-paced

3.0

it's ok!