Margins
The Passion of Alice book cover
The Passion of Alice
1995
First Published
3.60
Average Rating
258
Number of Pages

"In Latin, suffering and passion come from the same root," observes Alice Forrester, the wry heroine of this poignant and sardonically witty debut. And who would know better than twenty-five-year-old Alice, passionately committed to her own suffering—an all-consuming addiction to food deprivation—as a divine form of self-knowledge? After an episode of heart failure, Alice arrives in the eating disorder clinic of Seaview Hospital, where she detachedly watches a circus unfold . . . starring her perfectionist mother, Syd ("she'd been a synchronized swimmer in college"), her counselors ("the therapists are like tuning forks for epiphanies"), and the resident anorexics, bulimics, and compulsive eaters. But it is newcomer Maeve Sullivan, at once raucous and tender, with her fleshy body and hedonistic appetites, who turns Alice's adventure beyond her own distorted looking glass into a new perception of herself—and who wakens an attraction that touches Alice's soul and changes her life forever. Praise for The Passion of Alice "A smart, funny, wonderful book that will contain truth for every reader."— Los Angeles Times Book Review "[A] tart and edgy first novel . . . A rarity—an examination of a twenty-five-year-old woman's peculiar inner life, wrapped in a sharp comedy of manners."—Harper's Bazaar "Stephanie Grant's first novel is as grim as it is powerful, stripped entirely of the convenient life-affirming consolations and breakthroughs that can make 'social issue' fiction easier to take. Her prose style is relentlessly cool and stark, serving as x-ray vison that registers the hardest truths without prettification."—The Boston Globe

Avg Rating
3.60
Number of Ratings
618
5 STARS
23%
4 STARS
31%
3 STARS
31%
2 STARS
13%
1 STARS
2%
goodreads

Author

Stephanie Grant
Stephanie Grant
Author · 4 books

There is more than one Stephanie Grant on Goodreads Stephanie Grant’s first novel, The Passion of Alice, was published in 1995 by Houghton Mifflin, and was nominated for Britain’s Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction and the Lambda Award for Best Lesbian Fiction. Map of Ireland, which was published by Scribner in March 2008, is a contemporary retelling of Huck Finn that places female sexuality and friendship at the center of one of our foundational myths about race. Her writing has received numerous awards including the Rona Jaffe Foundation Writer’s Award, an Individual Artists Fellowship from the Ohio Arts Council, and a Creative Writing Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Formerly Writer-in-Residence at Mount Holyoke College, she is currently Visiting Writer at the Franklin Humanities Institute at Duke University. For the author of GCSE review guides, please refer to Stephanie Grant

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