The Revolution of little girls

by Blanche Mccrary Boyd

Paperback, 1992

Notes

Little Ellen Burns swaps her bride doll for a six-shooter, later escapes the American South, and eventually makes peace with herself, her mother, and her unsettling childhood ... review on goodreads

Description

No matter how hard she tries, Ellen Burns will never be Scarlett O'Hara. As a little girl in South Carolina, she prefers playing Tarzan to playing Jane. As a teenage beauty queen she spikes her Cokes with spirits of ammonia and baffles her elders with her Freedom Riding sympathies. As a young woman in the 1960s and '70s, she hypnotizes her way to Harvard, finds herself as a lesbian, then very nearly loses herself to booze and shamans. And though the wry, rebellious, and vision-haunted heroine of this exhilarating novel may sometimes seem to be living a magnolia-scented Portrait of the Artist as a Young Woman, Blanche McCrary Boyd's The Revolution Of Little Girls is a completely original arid captivating work.

Collection

Call number

F BOY

Genres

Awards

Lambda Literary Award (Winner — 1991)
Publishing Triangle Awards (Finalist — 1992)

Publication

New York : Vintage Books [Random House], 1992, c1991

Physical description

205 p.; 21 cm
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