Margins
The Local News book cover
The Local News
2009
First Published
3.21
Average Rating
369
Number of Pages

A deeply moving story of the complicated bond between brother and sister “Going missing was the only interesting thing my brother had ever done.” Even a decade later, the memories of the year Lydia Pasternak turned sixteen continue to haunt her. As a teenager, Lydia lived in her older brother’s shadow. While Danny’s athletic skills and good looks established his place with the popular set at school, Lydia’s smarts relegated her to the sidelines, where she rolled her eyes at her brother and his meathead friends and suffered his casual cruelty with resigned bewilderment. Though a part of her secretly wished for a return of the easy friendship she and Danny shared as children, another part of her wished Danny would just vanish. And then, one night, he did. In the year following Danny Pasternak’s disappearance, his parents go off the rails, his town buzzes with self-indulgent mourning, and his little sister Lydia finds herself thrust into unwanted celebrity, forced to negotiate her ambivalent—often grudging—grief for a brother she did not particularly like. Suddenly embraced by Danny’s old crowd, forgotten by her parents, and drawn into the missing person investigation by her family’s intriguing private eye, Lydia both blossoms and struggles to find herself during Danny’s absence. But when a trail of clues leads to a shocking outcome in her brother’s case, the teenaged Lydia and the adult she will become are irrevocably changed, even now as she reluctantly prepares to return to her hometown. Relentlessly gripping, often funny, and profoundly moving, The Local News is a powerful exploration of the fraught relationship between a brother and sister and how our siblings define who we are.

Avg Rating
3.21
Number of Ratings
850
5 STARS
10%
4 STARS
27%
3 STARS
42%
2 STARS
18%
1 STARS
4%
goodreads

Author

Miriam Gershow
Miriam Gershow
Author · 3 books

Miriam Gershow’s debut novel, The Local News, was hailed as “unusually credible and precise" and "deftly heartbreaking” by The New York Times. Miriam’s stories appear in The Georgia Review, Gulf Coast and Black Warrior Review, among other journals. She is the recipient of a Fiction Fellowship from the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing andan Oregon Literary Fellowship, as well as writing residencies at Playa Summer Lake and the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts. Miriam lives with her family in Eugene OR, where she teaches at the University of Oregon. She is at work on her next novel. (Photo Credit: Livia Fremouw)

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