Whitney (Many Voices Project Book 128), by Joe Stracci
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Whitney (Many Voices Project Book 128), by Joe Stracci
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When you view 30 as a death sentence, your time is always running out. Such is the predicament of the narrator and Whitney--his long-term girlfriend/ballast/sparring partner. They learn to coexist in a relationship addled by alcohol, drugs, and infidelity. Whether in an apple orchard or a junkie's bathroom, tender moments punctuate an otherwise hauntingly dysfunctional friendship.
Whitney (Many Voices Project Book 128), by Joe Stracci- Published on: 2015-10-28
- Released on: 2015-10-28
- Format: Kindle eBook
About the Author Joe Stracci was born in the Bronx in 1984, a Virgo, although, he doesn't believe in that stuff, no matter how many times people say, "a Virgo--that explains a lot." Joe graduated from Manhattanville College in 2006 and earned an MFA at Bennington College in 2009. His fiction has been published in Alaska Quarterly Review, Inkwell, PANK Magazine, Specter Magazine, and Word Riot. His first novel, Whitney, was the winner of the 2011 New Rivers Press Many Voices Project.Follow him online at joestracci.net.
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Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. A beautiful and disturbing read By A reader from NY, NY Whitney is an unusual novel, taut and focused, with a grimly romantic heart. It's as likely to appeal to lovers as it is to lovers of Jim Thompson or early Jay McInerney; a dark, druggy, disturbed fairy tale with an ending both inevitable and surprising.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Beautifully written By jantor Whitney is a beautifully written novel of a complicated love and a life of raw emotion. The prose flows seamlessly; the characters are believable and there is little that will not resonate with an honest, open audience. My only caveat, and I offer this reluctantly, is the chapter that focuses on the narrator’s sex life. It diminishes the narrator’s previously complex relationship with Whitney to a bodily function, in this reviewer's opinion. Joyously, it is only one chapter and the complexity of their life together, apart, with family and friends continues, like a well constructed symphony to a satisfying crescendo.
0 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Good in theory, not in practice By Molls Although the premise of Whitney seemed engaging enough, which encouraged me enough to attempt to read it, from the first page I found myself in a constant struggle to trudge on from one paragraph to the next. I originally had thought the prose format was intriguing, especially as I enjoy poetry of most forms, but once I got further into the text the inconsistent flow in narrative became distracting and induced a sort of reader's whiplash. That is, the narrative is described through prose stanzas separated by transitional icons that, in my opinion, distract even further from the focus (or rather the intended focus). Each of the stanzas were connected under the same theme (in which it jumped around constantly, but sometimes followed the same storyline (which created even more inconsistency in flow).That's not to say that I disliked every part of the book. The format of the book itself was admittedly original, despite it's ineffectiveness, which is a rarity with today's cookie-cutter formats. The attempt to merge poetry/pose form with a novel narrative was rather innovative and I had hoped it would be a successful form for the narrative, but it unfortunately fell flat. Additionally, there were quite a few passages that I was able to strongly relate to and that caused me to think about my own relationships. Unfortunately these moments were far too short and rare, so they eventually became too benign to redeem the rest of the book for me.
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