Eating The Cheshire Cat: A Novel
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Product Description
Eating the Cheshire Cat lures us into a world of perfectly planned parties and steep social ladders, where traditional rites of passage take unpredictable and horrifying turns as three girls and their overbearing mothers collide. In Tuscaloosa, Alabama, beauty is as beauty does, with axes and knives and killer smiles.
Sarina Summers and her mother will stop at nothing to have it all. Nicole Hicks harbors a fierce obsession with Sarina, which repeatedly undermines Mrs. Hicks's ambitious goals. Bitty Jack Carlson, a nice girl from the wrong side of the tracks, is caught in the crossfire but struggles to succeed outside the confines of this outrageous yet eerily familiar Southern community. It's survival of the fittest. Which girl will come out on top?
Covering everything from summer camp to the University of Alabama's Homecoming game, this fast-paced and unforgettable novel will keep readers guessing until the bitter end.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1823495 in Books
- Published on: 2001-02-13
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 288 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Amazon.com
In Eating the Cheshire Cat, three little girls are born into the rigorous tradition of Southern womanhood, with all its standards of grace, beauty, and cutthroat competitiveness. Sarina, mean from birth and pretty as love, has the best chance of achieving Southern queenhood. Bitty Jack and Nicole are the two girls she leaves in her perfumed wake in this novel of friendship gone sour. Sweet-natured Bitty Jack attends summer camp with Sarina, who accuses Bitty Jack's father, the camp handyman, of being a pervert and ruins his life. Bitty Jack quietly nurtures a grudge. Nicole, meanwhile, suffers a frenzied obsession with Sarina throughout their adolescence and college years, an obsession that results in uniquely macabre expressions of love.
Helen Ellis's first novel tries to walk with its two feet simultaneously in three different territories, and if that sounds a little uncomfortable, well, it is. Eating the Cheshire Cat plays at the Southern Gothic surreal: Bitty Jack's first love affair is with a circus freak and the novel ends in an unsurprising sororal bloodbath. But it also toys with the comic: Sarina hatches elaborate plans to cover her reputation-building lies. And, at its best, it casts a cold, even a sociological, eye on the doings of Southern American princesses: Ellis describes the pledging of the Tri Delt sorority in loving detail. If, for instance, a girl doesn't make the Tuscaloosa chapter, she could "rush Auburn two weeks later. Maybe the girl would make Tri Delt there. But everyone knew that wasn't as good. It was an agricultural college, for crying out loud. At the Alabama-Auburn football games, those girls were known as Delta Dogs." It's a relief when Ellis lets her cattiness run wild--and doesn't goop it up with fake gore. --Claire Dederer
From Publishers Weekly
This debut novel knocks down Southern stereotypes, literally and figuratively, with its updated version of the pretty, ambitious belle who wreaks havoc all around her. Sarina Summers, a cross between Scarlett O'Hara and Carrie, is an almost picture-perfect teenager except for her crooked pinkies. In a dramatic opening scene, Sarina's mother smashes the offending digits after her daughter's Sweet Sixteen luau party, and then drives her to the hospital to have them reset. Mother and daughter are two of a kind: whatever Sarina learns from her mother, she implements 10-fold. She already has her claws in troubled, self-mutilating Nicole Hicks, the girl next door. Nicole's mother, Mrs. Hicks, was a victim of Sarina's mother's sorority tricks, and she tries to train Nicole to compete with Sarina, but Nicole is all too happy to be Sarina's devoted sidekick. Sarina can't charm everyone, though. At Camp Chickasaw, she wins the undying hatred of scrawny Bitty Jack Carlson, when she wriggles her way out of an embarrassing moment by falsely accusing Bitty Jack's janitor father of molestation. Ellis tracks the fortunes of all three girls from their first discovery of sexual longing to the novel's explosive climax, which coincides with Sarina's crowning as homecoming queen of the University of Alabama. Using her disturbing tale to dissect female obsession with beauty, acceptance, friendship and sex, Ellis displays substantial insight into the nuances of Southern living, social climbing and mother and daughter relationships. But it is her deliciously catty humor and breathless storytelling that turn the Alabama of this Southern gothic satire into a chillingly funny Wonderland, complete with three desperate Alices. Agent, Chris Calhoun. (Jan.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Ellis's first novel is the dark and, surprisingly, often humorous story of the relationship between three adolescents in the contemporary South. In the horrifying opening chapter, Sarina Summers's mother, determined to make her daughter perfect, smashes Sarina's crooked pinkie fingers so that a doctor will be forced to correct the defect. Meanwhile, across the street from the Summers's home, Nicole Hicks must confront her own mother's implacable need to have her daughter outdo Sarina, when all Nicole really wants to do is worship her best friend. When Sarina accuses handyman Jack Carlson of spying on her in the bathroom at summer camp, her lie earns her the enmity of Jack's daughter, Bitty Jack, whose essential honesty and goodness are compromised by her hatred for Sarina. The novel reaches its fatal climax several years later during a homecoming parade at the University of Alabama, in which one of the three girls is forced to live with the tragic consequences of her actions. Because the whole Southern womanhood shtick has been done to death in contemporary fiction, and the behavior of the characters often strains credulity, this is a not a novel to purchase heavilyAexcept, of course, in Alabama public libraries.ANancy Pearl, Washington Ctr. for the Book, Seattle
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
