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Bye Bye Blondie

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In a wrecked modern version of a romance novel, acclaimed French writer Virginie Despentes pokes at the simultaneous ecstasy and banality of love in an age of psychiatry and punk.
 
Gloria lives in seething rage, lashing out at everyone—particularly, a string of bewildered boyfriends—at the local bar. But when her latest explosion leaves her out on the street, she unexpectedly runs into famed television personality Eric Muir. Incidentally, he’s also her teenage boyfriend, and the one who started it all. Once upon a time, Gloria and Eric met while institutionalized, and then became a mascot couple for those homeless and high on a noisy mix of drugs, music, and counterculture. Now, twenty years later, Gloria is enamored by youthful love resurrected and determined to immortalize their story by writing a screenplay. Whisked away to Paris, she’s transformed from a provincial loose cannon into an urbane party guest. But navigating life and love isn’t any easier for the middle-aged. Cutting deep to unearth the marriage of institutional violence and heterosexual relationships, Bye Bye Blondie illustrates how young women are continuously dragged down and neglected, and then dangled false offers of fame in lieu of real, redemptive recognition.
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    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2016
      Misspent youth and the possibility of a second chance from the French author of Apocalypse Baby (2015), etc. As teens confined to a psychiatric hospital, Eric and Gloria bond over a shared passion for bands like "the Stooges, New York Dolls, Generation X." Once she's back home in Nancy, though, Gloria forgets about Eric as she loses herself in the local punk scene. Then, in the midst of a bar fight, she sees him. The bland, blond, bourgeois boy she'd met in the hospital now has a shaved head and a menacing aspect. She falls in love, and they run away. They travel to Paris. They go to shows. They drink and smoke and sniff glue and have sex. Eventually, Eric disappears, and Gloria returns to Nancy alone. With sardonic humor, Despentes writes that "in different ways, both of them would realize what a very poor preparation punk rock had been for later life." Gloria becomes a violent barfly who's frequently homeless. Eric becomes a TV star. Their reunion, 20 years later, seems like Gloria's salvation, but when she ruins what may be her own chance to make something of herself, Gloria falls apart all over again. Despentes is known for unflinchingly dark narratives with a feminist edge. (Her first novel, Baise-Moi, is a rape-revenge fantasy.) This story, though, feels a bit limp. Punk has been too thoroughly co-opted by mass culture to signify danger or rebellion to anyone over the age of 15, so the first half is mostly just precious. And the disappointment that sends the adult Gloria into a downward spiral? The producer making a movie from her autobiographical screenplay ignores her artistic vision. Frustrating, sure, but not exactly exploitation. Shockingly anodyne work from a writer notorious for her power to shock.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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