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La Tour dreams of the wolf girl  Cover Image Book Book

La Tour dreams of the wolf girl

Record details

  • ISBN: 0618081739
  • Physical Description: 196 p. ; 22 cm.
    print
  • Publisher: Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 2002.
Subject: La Tour, Georges du Mesnil de 1593-1652 Appreciation Fiction
Women art historians Fiction
Artists' models Fiction
Wild women Fiction
Genre: Psychological fiction.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Bibliomation.

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  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Silas Bronson Library - Waterbury FIC HUDDLE, D (Text) 34005090010645 Adult Fiction Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 0618081739
La Tour Dreams of the Wolf Girl
La Tour Dreams of the Wolf Girl
by Huddle, David
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Excerpt

La Tour Dreams of the Wolf Girl

I PROFESSOR NELSON cant get free of Stevens Creek, Virginia. Nine miles west of the Blue Ridge Parkway, marked on only the most detailed maps, its a cluster of maybe a hundred houses, a store, and two filling stations. During her childhood, the hamlet had two or three times as many of its young men serving time in the penitentiary as it had students attending college. Hostility was part of its weather, but she was never that way. Quiet though she was, Suzanne always wanted to be close to somebody. Her two older sisters, Bonnie and Gail, turned cold toward her when they were little, though Suzanne still tries to be companionable to them. On their birthdays, she sends her sisters cards, but they forget hers every year. At Christmas she buys gifts for them and their kids, knowing that she will receive neither gifts nor thank-you notes. Her parents are friendly, but in a superficial way. Theyre guarded in their dealings with her; when Suzanne calls them to chat, she senses how they maneuver to end the conversation. The estrangements hurt Suzanne. Distant as her life is from theirs, shes done nothing to warrant her sisters unfriendliness, nor has she ever given her parents cause to be wary of her. How could she help being the freak of the family? She didnt realize that she was smarter -- a lot smarter -- than her sisters and her parents until she was in eighth grade. Thats when she had to ride the school bus thirty-five miles a day, to and from the consolidated high school. The teachers there whod taught Bonnie and Gail were so stunned by Suzannes ability that they told her, compared with her sisters, she was a genius. Compared with most of the children who rode the bus in from Stevens Creek to Galax, Suzanne was a female Einstein. Of course shes the only one in her family who doesnt have that mountain accent -- her intuition obliterated it, starting with her first day of eighth grade. People in Galax spoke a more sophisticated version of Appalachian English than did people in Stevens Creek. The way the town kids mocked the country kids was so ruthless that most of Suzannes Stevens Creek school-bus acquaintances became predictably hostile and all the more determined to hold on to their mother tongue. Suzanne was the only one who began adapting. It was a talent she had -- listening, analyzing, imitating. By her sophomore year, the only ones mocking her way of speaking were a few of the more surly Stevens Creek kids, who took her Galaxized speech as a sign of betrayal. Mostly, though, the Stevens Creek kids thought of her as the one who could compete in that school, the one who had a chance of beating the Galax snobs at their own game. Nowadays Suzanne is pretty certain that the reason she changed her speech was to make friends among the smart kids. It didnt work. She was popular. Again and again she found herself in groups of Galax girls; she was invited to spend the night at this girls house and that ones. She made an Excerpted from La Tour Dreams of the Wolf Girl by David Huddle All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
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