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Cherry: A Memoir
 
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Cherry: A Memoir (Paperback)

by Mary Karr (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Picador; New edition edition (12 April 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0330485768
  • ISBN-13: 978-0330485760
  • Product Dimensions: 19.4 x 13 x 2.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 835,497 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

The second of Mary Karr's memoirs, Cherry, slips seamlessly into the rhythm and distinctive style of the first. As a girl idling her way through long, toxically boring summer afternoons in Leechfield, Texas, Karr dreamed up an unusual career for herself; "to write one-half poetry and one-half autobiography". She has since done both, and even when she's recounting a dirty joke, she can't help but employ a poet's precise and musical vision. Her first memoir, The Liar's Club, was as searing a chronicle of family life as can be imagined--tough, funny, and crackling with sorrow and wit. Against all odds, its sequel doesn't disappoint. Cherry finds the teenage Mary still marooned in a family whose behaviour ranges from charmingly eccentric to dangerously crazy. (This, for instance, is the Karr version of a note from home: "Lecia Karr's leprosy kicked in, and I had to wrap her limbs in balm and hyssop. Please excuse her".) But here the focus has shifted to Mary herself, furiously engaged in irritating authority at every turn: flouting the dress code, dropping acid, running from the police, falling in love.

First love, you might say, heart sinking in chest: what more can possibly be said about such a subject? Actually, a great deal. To read Cherry is to realise how rare it is to find a teenage girl portrayed on her own terms. As a chronicle of female adolescence with all its longings, fantasies, cruelties and fears, Karr's memoir goes darker and deeper than any book in which the protagonist doesn't end up dead. She turns a savage eye on her own hypocrisies and failings and we like her all the more for them. We even end up fond of Leechfield, easily the toughest, smelliest, nastiest little place ever to appear between the covers of a book--"a town too ugly not to love," her father called it in The Liar's Club. Growing up in such a place is necessarily about getting the hell out but it's also about inventing a new identity with which to make your escape. That's the blessing Karr's wise friend Meredith bestows after a particularly harrowing (and harrowingly funny) acid trip: "I see big adventures for Mary. Big adventures, long roads, great oceans: same self." Cherry is the story of how Karr begins to acquire that self, however fumblingly--a big adventure for Mary, as it is for all of us, and one we never finish as long as we live. Perhaps that's the book's greatest pleasure of all: it hints there's more to come. --Mary Park --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



Product Description

In this paperback of her long-awaited sequel, we find Karr once again trying to run from the thrills and terrors of her psychological and physical awakening by violently crashing up against authority in all its forms, shuttling between the principal's office and the jail cell. Yearning, like a typical teenager, for the ideal love or heart's companion who will make her feel whole again, she throws in her lot with an varied and outrageous band; surfers, yogis, bona fide geniuses.

Karr's edgy, brilliant prose careens between hilarity and tragedy. Although there are other memoirs that pay close attention to the process of self-creation and destruction that young girls go through, with all its accompanying anguish, self-consciousness and inertia, there is no one who writes about it like Mary Karr. Her prose is lustrous and cinematic, her humour earthy and irresistible. And the dramas and happenings of her life are of an intensity that few others ever experience.


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Cherry: A Memoir
75% buy the item featured on this page:
Cherry: A Memoir 3.3 out of 5 stars (3)
The Liars' Club
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The Liars' Club 4.7 out of 5 stars (3)
£7.19

 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully Written Memoir of an Excrutiating Adolescence,, 30 Aug 2004
By Professor Donald Mitchell "Jesus Makes Me a P... (Boston) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)      
This review is from: Cherry (Hardcover)
Unbelievable pain scalds almost every sentence of this powerful autobiography of growing up an intelligent outsider in a small Texas town (Leechfield -- "mind-crushing atmosphere of sameness"). You will find yourself stunned by the challenging circumstances of Professor Karr's teenage years, and rooting for her to find her grounding.

The superb writing would be enough to attract any reader, even though it features a frankness and roughness of tone that I normally condemn. In this case, the language is warranted in portraying the emotional reality of Professor Karr's life. It gives you access to her mostly uncensored thinking in a way that captures the moment for all time. For example, in describing her forthcoming trip to California she says, "[Y]ou are still immortal, and that coast . . . is beckoning you with invisible fingers of hashish smoke."

Ms. Karr managed to be an outsider in more ways that most can imagine. She was an intelligent female in a town that did not favor intelligence. Her family was about as unconventional as you can imagine (Her mother had a secret history of quick marriages and divorces -- 7 marriages in all, including two to Ms. Karr's daddy; her daddy drank and kept a married mistress who was later shot and killed by her husband.). She was an unattractive tomboy who had a strong sexual drive from a young age. She frequently misbehaved in ways that caused people to become very uncomfortable (such as abusing people verbally in explicitly profane ways, riding topless on her bicycle when she was 11, and going noticeably braless in high school).

As a result, she had a hard time making and keeping friends.

Her mother and daddy had a habit of just disappearing at night to show up days later with various lame excuses. She and her sister would steal her daddy's truck at 13 and drive around looking for one or both of their parents.

As a result, she worried a lot, had trouble sleeping and found herself easily moved to grief.

Not surprisingly, she was soon experimenting with almost every sort of drug and way of partying that you can imagine . . . looking to dull or avoid the pain. These experiences and their consequences are described in compelling detail in the book.

Not too many people cut her any slack, and she was always surprised when someone tried to help her.

Between the vividness of her experiences and the beauty of the writing, this book is likely to become a classic among young people, especially young women, and those who want to understand them better.

After reading the book, I gave my teenage daughter a big hug and thanked our lucky stars that she is having an easier time than Professor Karr did.

After you finish this book, consider how you can create more stability and kindness for someone in your family who really needs them.

Be there.

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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Cherry - A very irritating book., 4 Aug 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Cherry (Paperback)
This book is criminal. Not just because the author details her teenage life of drug consuming within it, but also because it is very, very irritating to read. The author alternates between wiriting in the first person, which is alright, but then more than half of the book is written using 'you'. For example 'You're standing around a campfire', 'Your friend', 'You are sent to the principle's office'. I find myself thinking as I read, "No I didn't do that, it was you, you irresponsible young tearaway!"
Aside from the actual style of writing which you may be able to get used to, the book isn't much good itself. It seems to have very good reviews from literary critics, but most of us aren't critics and read a book because we want to enjoy it. The story (that that there is) jumps around from event to event, and most of it details the author standing around smoking pot. (Why did the police not catch them, why?!) A couple of enjoyable, readable, parts of the book come from her arrest and night in jail and a couple of the high school events, but mainly, this book has no real substance to it, it isn't funny, it's not a good read.
Try it if you like, you may enjoy it. I didn't.
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3.0 out of 5 stars A memoir of lost innocence, 28 Jul 2008
By Archy (ALTRINCHAM, Cheshire United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
If you enjoyed the first memoir, The Liar's Club, you'll probably enjoy this. It's a little disjointed, and rather tails off towards the end (other people's acid trips are always boring to read about) but given the author's background it does evoke more sympathy than annoyance.

The prologue is rather misleading; I expected to read a 'road' memoir afterwards as she leaves home before chapter one, but it's all about her childhood and adolescence, which is okay, but not what I expected.The events described vary in interest, and it is a patchy read, but there's usually enough to keep you turning the pages.

The style, however, and the way much of the book is addressed to the reader when describing the author's life, is a most irritating affectation. (Or maybe it's how the author distances herself from her actions.) The way in which the prose turns flowery is perhaps intended to display poetic sensibilities, but just irritates too.

I think it's possible to enjoy this book without being judgemental about the author's life, but I wouldn't have hopes of a classic
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