The Clay Girl: A Novel (An Ari Appleton Novel, 1)
The Clay Girl: A Novel (An Ari Appleton Novel, 1) book cover

The Clay Girl: A Novel (An Ari Appleton Novel, 1)

Paperback – October 11, 2016

Price
$16.95
Format
Paperback
Pages
352
Publisher
a misFit book
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1770413030
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.87 x 8.5 inches
Weight
1 pounds

Description

“Tucker's triumphant debut novel is the story of a childhood lost, a family found, and a coming-of-age, recounted in precise and poetic language … It is at times difficult to read, but this novel is worth every moment of pain and every tear.” ― Publishers Weekly, starred“It is the voice of the characters, the kindness of strangers and the ingenuity and determination of our protagonist against terrible forces that make this story sing.” ― San Francisco Chronicle“Ari Appleton will take your breath away … Astonishingly exquisite debut novel … Author Tucker's prose is as lyrical and powerful as the ocean, Ari's voice as sure and strong as a rudder through wild seas … Her rare gift of showing us beauty, hope and humour amid profound trauma make The Clay Girl an extraordinary debut novel.” ― Toronto Star“[An] unbelievably accomplished first novel.” ― NOW Magazine“This is a beautifully written story of strength and resilience, leading to ultimate victory over seemingly impossible challenges. Hariet/Ari/Arielle (known by various names to different people at different times) was born into an epically dysfunctional family. She must deal with an uncaring mother, a sexual predator father, and an abusive stepfather while being denied escape to a loving, supportive aunt. Despite these and other challenges, the girl not only survives, but, with help from caring teachers, grows into a strong young woman who finds love and is able to nurture others as well as herself. This book, which is like no other in terms of character, voice, and plot, rewards the reader with a memorable heroine who triumphs over daunting odds.” ― Joe Strebel, Anderson’s Bookshop (Naperville, IL) Heather Tucker has won many prose and short-story writing competitions, and her stories have appeared in anthologies and literary journals. She lives in Ajax, Ontario. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The Clay Girl A Novel By Heather Tucker ECW PRESS Copyright © 2016 Heather TuckerAll rights reserved.ISBN: 978-1-77041-303-0 CHAPTER 1 My sister-house collapsed — again. Our aunties collected us up. * * * St. Patrick's midnight bells shiver up my neck hairs. I quiet-step over my sleeping sisters, sneaking through Auntie Elsie's front door to the wishing sewer. Carved on the iron grate is 1953, the year I came out of the water and became a girl. I release one smooth stone, a wish. Pebble small, pebble white, let me stay here all my nights. Second stone carries a spell. Abra-can't-grab-ya, no beans can have ya. Third stone, an offering, a prayer. Oh, suffering children Lord, deliver us from Aunt Moral Corruption. Sacrifice swallowed. There, that's done it, Jasper. We'll be okay now. Back inside, I crawl into the spy cave, resting my cheek on a rug that smells like an old man's suit. Tires ringing over the grate snap me up. I peek through the curtains. A car marked POLICE MONTRÉAL creeps like a panther against the curb. Bleedin' Jesus, they're back. Auntie's slippers slap down the hall to the knock. Boots, big as tool boxes, step in, crushing the blue flowers on the runner. "Just checking everything's settled, ma'am." "Their mother is at St. Mary's and we've made arrangements for the girls." "You hear of these things, but you never think ... Hope things improve." "Well, they can't get worse." Hear that, Jasper? No worses. We're staying. In the kitchen Auntie hums "Joyful, Joyful" and motes swirl on the sunstream like they know the words by heart. Sister number one skedaddles out the front door and into Scotty Davenport's convertible. I duck when Reverend Lowry swoops in like an angry owl, snatching sisters two and three, walloping them with a prayer before leaving, "And for these lambs, so scarred by man's depravity, give strength and travelling mercies. Amen and amen." Down the path they go, shoulders freshly loaded with the sins of our father who aren't in heaven. Aunt Dolores pulls into the empty spot by the curb. Sister four bounces away. "Hey, Auntie Dee, you get the pick of the Appleton tree." Sister five slips out the back door without making a sound. Mr. Whiskers chases rainbows sprinkled on the rug from the fancy vase. Look, Jasper, a sign, like when the Almighty delivered Noah. Tell me the boat story, Hari. Um, one night, a slice of moon fell into the ocean. Kangaroos welcomed us aboard Jasper's Jewel. We sailed to Kentucky where all the reindeer wore blue sweaters and — "Hariet." Aunt Elsie tilts the green velvet chair. "Come on out, now. Mrs. MacLaren is here. Where's your coat?" "At the MacLaren's. Under Jinxie's head." "It's near freezing today." A grey sweater is sacrificed from the back of the closet. "You know, we wish we could keep you, too, but one is all we can manage and Jennah needs to be near her job." Auntie's pretty fingers triple roll the sleeves. "There, how's that?" The wool is the prickly kind. "Spectacular, Auntie." * * * At the train station I wait where I've been told to stay put. I can't see the dragon's tail, but a worrisome blackness puffs from nose to middle. Cripes, Jasper, it's coughing like Grandpa before he went to meet his baker. Riding a red-nosed dragon train to the ocean twists Jasper with excitement. I shove him down. You forgetting the horrification waiting at the end? Indescriptable acts upon my person, that's what. Mrs. MacLaren comes hurrying down the platform with the ticket and takes me by the hand to feed me to the dragon. "Up you get." The step is half as high as me, which would be no trouble except for the situation under my dress. "Come on, Hariet, you're too heavy for lifting." I oblige, hoisting up my eight years of flesh and bone. "Good Lord, child, where are your panties?" "Jory got the last ones." One thing learned being smallest of six: you get what you get and most times you don't. She sacrifices fifty cents. "No time now. If you see a five-and-dime could you manage to buy a pair?" If I can travel my lone self from Montreal to Halifax to Sydney, I can buy underwears. They'll be pink ... no, green, with little flowers. "Mrs. MacLaren?" "Yes?" A salt-moon winks on my scuffy shoe as I tap the metal step like a world famous rocket dancer. "Spit it out." "Is Daddy in a whale like Jonah?" "He's where he can't hurt anyone ever again." "But what if his going hurts in my belly?" "Just drink some warm milk and you'll be fine." "Mrs. MacLaren?" "What is it now?" "Jinxie likes her white ear scratched best." "Soon as your mummy is on her feet you'll be back scratching her ear yourself. Off you go now and find a seat." I can read so I know the brass-buttoned ticket-puncher is William. Jasper quivers in my pocket. Don't be scared. Mr. Brassbuttons is just a walrus with a fancy biscuit tin on his head. "Ticket, miss." I dig inside Grandma's broke-strap carryall, past my swirl-coloured ball, Jasper's matchbox bed, toothbrush, bottle of hero ashes, and mittens that Grandma knit, to reach the ticket. "Quite the journey you're taking. Someone meeting you in Halifax?" "No. My Auntie Moral Corruption is collecting me in Sydney." "Who?" "After my sisters got doled out she was the only one left." I heave the God-have-mercy load off my chest. "Beans. There's big trouble with them." "There's no trouble in beans, little miss. Settle in. You've a long haul ahead, but there's nothing like October pictures from a train to pass the miles." Walruses have lovely whiskers and a lot of goodness tucked in their folds. I push back the stress-curls forever jouncing out of my braids. "You got kids?" "Three little misses and a mister." Well, there's a universe of a letdown, Jasper. He won't be wanting another miss. A stop brings travelers hurrying for seats. A green-suited badger. A silky Siamese, her parfum d'lilac tail brushing noses down the aisle. A plaid-vested beaver risks sitting with a half-dressed Hariet. Not that the lady has big teeth, she's just the busy kind that thought to pack a good lunch, plus she knows about dams, and that too many paper cones of water has me at bursting. "Come on, little dearie, facilities are this way." I've never had anything so shocked with tongue pleasers as what Mrs. Beaver stuffed between two pieces of bread. "Thanks, lady, this is spectacular." "And where are you from?" "The sister-house is where I live most the time." "Like a convent?" "Nothing like. There're no grey nuns with rulers. In my sister-house, June makes the walls. Jory is the roof. Jillianne is the floor. Jennah, she's the windows, fluttery with lacey curtains. And Jacquie is the yellow door. And Jasper and me tuck ourselves safe inside and tell stories." "Well, yes. I'm sure you do." She licks her hankie and swipes mustard from my cheek. "You're awfully little to be travelling on your own." "My mummy's sick with a conniption. Auntie Elsie's keeping Jennah. Grandma's puttin' up with June and Jacquie. Auntie Dolores nabbed Jory. Jillianne and my dog are with Mrs. MacLaren. But Jasper's come along with me." "Jasper your brother?" "No, ma'am, my seahorse." "Let me guess, your name is Jane or Jessie?" "I was a hoped-for Joshua. Everyone said with another girl my daddy had a string of jewels." "Ah, so it's Jewel." "No, Hariet. A one r Hariet. Mummy messed up the papers on account of I used up her neverlasting nerve." "Bet your father is Harold then." "No, Vincent." "And where is he?" "Um ... incarcerated in a Turkey prison." "Why?" "For ... poaching tigers." "Really?" Don't tell he put a bustard in Jacquie's oven or we won't get another brownie. "What really happened is ... this flash tidal wave reared up and he drowned trying to save my dog who fell into the vast Saint Lawrence. Jinxie washed ashore downriver but a giant otter dragged Vincent out to sea." A consoling brownie lands in my hand. "And where will you be staying?" "With Auntie Mary Catherine and her lady friend. They eat little girls like bean burritos, but everyone else was already too full up with me. You got kids?" Mrs. Beaver opens a photographic accordion of kids dancing ballet and blowing at birthday candles. The pictures make a grey-socked, one r'd Hariet wish she hadn't swallowed the second brownie. * * * "Let's get you comfy for the night." William Walrus makes a bed on two seats with sheets that don't smell a bit of piss or snot and a pillow so feather-puffed a thousand eider-ducks must be naked somewhere. He gives me three digestives and warm milk. On the strawberry side of his chocolaty hand he writes: 1961. "You know what this is, little miss?" "The year of our Lord?" "Watch old William's hand." He turns it right around. "See? The whole world can get turned upside down and this year still lands right. There's good ahead. Old William sees it." "You see a store to buy underwears for fifty cents?" "There's an hour between trains tomorrow and I know just the place. Hunker down this way so you'll see the sky when you wake." When riding a dragon, chomp-chomp, chomp-chomp, chomp-chomping away the miles from where you came there's nothing nicer than a walrus singing, "There's a place for you, somewhere a place for you. Peace and quiet and underwears. Take my hand and we'll buy a pair ..." * * * Mrs. Kramer of Kramer's General Store is a hen clucking over my circumstances. My new panties are white with a tiny pink flower and a green bow so I get everything I ever wanted. "Lord a tunder, darlin', Sydney's too cold this time a year for bare legs. On with these woolies." She snaps me into tights like Dr. Herbert takes to a glove. It'd be nice living with a wing-over-the-shoulder hen. "You got kids, Mrs. Kramer?" "Comin' out my ears." "Oh." I hold up the fifty cents. "I can special deliver the rest once I get settled." She plucks a quarter. "This'll do it, with change for a sweet." * * * William Walrus tucks a wrapped sandwich into my carryall. "This train will take you right to Sydney." I hug him big. "Thank you, mister. It's been spectacular knowing you." "Hang onto that little fellow riding with you." "Jasper?" "He'll lead you to your heart's double." He buttons my sweater. "And your true home." * * * With my bum snugged into blue woolies I'm set for anything, even the devil herself. Binocular-eyed, I search for a wolf or a serpent. "Hello, sweetheart." She sneaks up from behind. "I'm Mary. Just look how you've grown." She's transfigurated into a gentle-Jesus-sweet-'n-mild getup, but Hariet Appleton knows about the snake hiding under the little sweetheart. "Under this sweater I'm scrawnier than a starving weasel. Dr. Herbert says there's not much on me worth eating, and for certain I'd give a body heartburn." "Is your trunk inside?" "Wasn't much for bringing." "You're shivering. Come on, there's a blanket in the truck." No matter how hard I swallow, my bally lunch scrambles up, landing a whisker away from Auntie's red shoe. "You're safe here, I promise." She offers a tissue. "Come meet your cousins." "You've got kids?" Three exuberant mutts leap from the truck. "This is Hoover, Cork, and Wabi-sabi." "Can I ride in back with them?" "The road can be a little bump-and-throw, but Wabi loves a lap up front. Let me get a bucket in case your tummy ups it again." She moves butterfly-over-flower quiet. A fat rope of hair hangs to her bum and the escaping curls are more like a party than a stress. "If you're my mummy's big sister how come you're younger?" "Your mummy's had a lot of hard things." Wabi has one ear up and white splotches like paint spilled on her black fur. "Could she ever sleep with me?" "She'll have your bed warmed before you climb in." I sometimes wondered where Mummy's smile went and here it is on Auntie Mary Catherine's face. On the long drive, Jasper wraps his tail around an escaping curl and near unscrews my head from its connecter. Look, over there. Mmm, smell that. Oh, what's that? "You okay, Hariet?" "You grow jewels here?" "You're seeing the sun on the ocean. Just so happens it's in our backyard." Up ahead, a painted roof on a fat grey barn looks like the tin has been peeled back to let fish swim in the sky. Oh, don't you wish we could live there? Like the god-listeners hear us the truck turns into the lane. A stone-faced house with two big window eyes says hello. Jasper's nose squishes against the windsheild. Look, it has a yellow door. "Well, here we are." "It's ... it's like the sister-house." "Where's that?" "Inside the locked room." She hushes my hair like she knows everything about outsides and ins. Jasper, there's a pot boiling somewhere, sure as sure. CHAPTER 2 I wait, like Gretel, for the beanwitches to pitch me into the oven. Fourth morning, first light, Auntie's friend, Nia, comes for me. She's a polar bear, all tall and silky white. "Hariet, come meet my friends." Jasper bows his head. Our father who harps in heaven ... "Here, put on my sweater." Forgive us our messes ... "Be very quiet." Yea though I walk to the belly of — Bambis? Outside the back door, Bambis gather. Auntie Mary is the mother deer, offering apples, and quiet-like they take them from her hand. Long grass glitters all fairy feathers and the ocean looks like the dragon dropped his whole treasure load. Hariet Appleton lives with a polar bear and a deer in a house that smells like Christmas at Mrs. MacLaren's. "Do you have kids, Auntie Nia?" "No, but I always wanted a little girl." "To eat like a bean burrito?" "Just to teach her things I know. Have her teach me back." "Could you teach me to feed the deer?" An apple slice smiles into my open hand. "Walk slow to them. If they startle and run, just joy in watching. They'll come back." * * * Auntie Nia spreads out Scrabble squares. "You keep working and by January you'll be ahead of all the grade threes." "Jacquie's the smartest Appleton. I'm dirt stupid." "Watch your mouth, you hear. You're clay, not dirt." Auntie Mary pulls cookies from the oven. "One cookie for three words." I spell: SEAHORSE, JASPER, MARY, NIA, INX. "You want two cookies, do you?" "I want another J for Jinx. You have nice names." "My given name is Eugenia. Always hated it. Mary found me Nia. It means shining purpose." Oh ... a silvery dolphin. "Could you find one for me, Auntie Mary?" She mixes HARIET tiles. "How about RITA?" "What does it mean?" She checks a big book. "Pearl." "That's nice, I guess." Jasper pokes, Oyster insides aren't near as good as shiny dolphins. "Well, merciful heavens, look what's been hiding in your name all along." She spells A-R-I. "It means lion. It can also mean eagle." She lifts my chin. "Ari Lioneagle. Suits you." * * * Pleasant Cove's grade three/four teacher has paint splatters on her white runners and hair bursting wind-happy red. "Mrs. Brown," says Auntie Mary, "this is my niece, Ari." "Well, aren't you a bright penny." "Your turkeys are spectacular." "Pardon?" I point to the apple turkeys with marshmallow heads lining the windowsill. "So happens, I'm one short." She plunks me down with supplies. "Trace your hand on the paper then cut it out." They walk to the door for some shushed-up hallway talk. Mrs. Brown comes back, situating her bottom into a chair. "Your auntie will be back at three thirty. How about you and I get to know each other before the others arrive. What were you learning at your old school?" "Well ... I didn't have much time for regular school 'cause ... I was in Siberia hunting pandas." "And did you catch any?" "No, ma'am. They're good hiders." "So what did you do?" "Well ... my daddy got sick with frostbite so I captured some wild huskies and made a sled out of a crashed airplane door and mushed him across the tundra to a hospital in Mexico." Mrs. Brown snatches me from my chair like a lizard takes a fly. "Glory beaver, you're a story weaver." Her chest clouds under my cheek. Jasper, look at all her goodness poking out the sides of the chair. * * * My stick loops in the water, churning out sister-mail. Dearest Jennah, June, Jacquie, Jory, and Jillianne: Moral Corruption is turning out to be a stupendous place to wait out the glorious revampment of the Appletons. I've got a job earning a whole dollar a week collecting shore treasures with my best-ever friend Sadie O'Shaughnessy. The aunties' old barn is a skyfish gallery, where driftwood becomes mystical beings with sea-glass eyes and red dirt changes into turtles swimming from the sides of shiny pots. (Continues...) Excerpted from The Clay Girl by Heather Tucker . Copyright © 2016 Heather Tucker. Excerpted by permission of ECW PRESS. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “It is the voice of the characters, the kindness of strangers, and the ingenuity and determination of our protagonist against terrible forces that make this story sing.” ― San Francisco Chronicle “[An] unbelievably accomplished first novel.” ― NOW Magazine American Booksellers Association Indie Next List pick Shortlisted for the 2017 Kobo Emerging Writer Prize Shortlisted for the 2017 Atlantic Book Awards Publishers Weekly, starred review A deeply compassionate novel about a gentle child who radiates goodness and the way that light refracts ― even in the harshest of circumstances. For the Appleton sisters, life has unravelled many times before. But with a sudden gunshot, it finally explodes. In the aftermath of chaos and tragedy, eight-year-old Hariet Appleton, known to all as Ari, is shipped off to Cape Breton and her Aunt Mary, who is purported to eat little girls. But Mary and her partner, Nia, offer an unexpected refuge to Ari and her steadfast companion, Jasper, an imaginary seahorse. Yet the respite does not last, and Ari is forced to return to her addiction-addled mother and broken sisters. Through the sexual revolution and drug culture of the 1960s, Ari struggles with her father’s legacy and her mother’s addictions, testing limits with substances that numb and men who show her kindness. Through it all, her epic imagination colors her grim reality. Ari spins through a chaotic decade of loss and love with wit, tenacity, and the astonishing balance unique to seahorses. The Clay Girl is a beautiful tour de force with the voice of an unforgetting child, sculpted by kindness, cruelty, and the extraordinary power of imagination.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(299)
★★★★
25%
(125)
★★★
15%
(75)
★★
7%
(35)
-7%
(-35)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Telling It Slant

This is an amazing debut. The story of Ari, youngest of six sisters in an extremely dysfunctional family is told slant -- in language so poetic, so allusive, so enigmatic that for the first few pages I found myself agreeing with Ari's teachers later in the book as he reads one of her stories: "I haven't a clue what half of it means but I feel it, I see it, and on some level I understand it completely."

The puzzlement clears soon and it becomes obvious that Ari is telling her story in the only way she can --sideways because the full on reality is too harsh.

The novel follows Ari from eight -- when her father kills himself, her mother has a breakdown, and the sisters are doled out to various relatives -- to sixteen when she has an opportunity to put into action the lessons life has taught her. During those eight years, Ari bounces between wonderful, nurturing situations and people -- and other people and situations that will test all her resilience.

The beauty of the writing and the indomitable spirit of young Ari keep this book from being depressing. Horrible things happen -- but so do wonderful things.

Highly, highly recommended!
8 people found this helpful
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The story is very good and the characters are those that you want in ...

READ THIS BOOK. The story is very good and the characters are those that you want in your life, But the writing,,,the writing will bring you to your knees. It can only be described as spectacular.
5 people found this helpful
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I bought the book for the stupidest reason...

I have to confess, I had no reason to buy this book other than I like seahorses, I collect seahorse paraphernalia, and there was a huge red seahorse on the cover of this book. I'd never heard of the book or its author, and I had absolutely no expectations or intentions for this book, beyond displaying it face-forward on my shelves. BAM. That's the sound of a meteor-sized diamond falling on my head, because that's what ended up happening. Ten pages in, I was texting all of my bibliophile friends and e-singing this book's praises. This story is infused with so much magic and tenderness amidst heart-wrenching circumstances. The main character, Ari, is an extremely resilient, gifted, compassionate child, the kind of kid that any of us would hope to raise. However, the stand-out character for me was Len, a man who married a broken, addicted woman with six troubled daughters and became the father (and mother) these kids never had. My hat's off to Heather Tucker for writing such a remarkable book, one that I will re-read for years to come, whenever I need a reminder that good people really do exist.
3 people found this helpful
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The Clay Girl (and Jasper) will capture your heart

In "The Clay Girl," by Heather Tucker, Hariet, at 8 years old, discovers many things over an 8-year span, including a better name for herself: Ari. At the beginning of the story of the Appleton sisters, the girls have been scattered to different temporary homes because of a major, violent event - this event was not the beginning of the horror or the tragedy for the Appleton girls, but it wraps up one particular chapter which leaves lingering damage for each sister for many years after.

This beautifully written, deep-as-the-ocean story takes situations where temptation is so great to get buried under depression and despair, and shines a light into how one brilliant child and her seahorse, Jasper, the only one who never leaves her, soak in the love, support and encouragement from battle-ready friends, teachers and family who stand behind her and help her to survive in what often feels like impossible conditions.

This is a story about not just surviving, despite the odds, but about thriving, helping others when you're down and struggling yourself, and both drawing the best out of others (even the mean-on-the-surface ones) while allowing them to bring out good in you that maybe you didn't realize you had. There's strategy in this story, valuable lessons (not to give anything away, but one or a few of them explains the title) and there are wonderful words of wisdom (from the quotes Uncle Iggy leaves on Ari's lunch bags to the often lyrical, unique, sometimes humorous and often hopeful way of looking at a scene as it unfolds that Ari has as she writes and creates various pieces of art - writing, sketches, necklaces, T-shirts) that make the reader dig a little deeper into thoughts and questions about life, love, loss, parents, responsibility, the power of evil cycles and of breaking such a cycle.

I loved this book, mainly because it made me think and feel deeply. I wish I were more like Ari - a star shining in the darkest night. I wish I had a Jasper, too. The other little bit of magic I enjoyed from this book was how the author managed to believably weave hope and light into the inky black, slimy, stinky, muddy, bloody, bullying, betraying parts. What a gem this book is.
3 people found this helpful
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It Takes A Village

Oh wow, oh wow, oh wow. You've gotta read this book and someone, please, make this into a movie!

I'll admit, at first I thought, "What did I get myself into with this one," because our protagonist is very young when she begins her narration and I was struggling to understand exactly what had transpired. But by page 10 I was hooked and by page 13 I was in love. Halfway through I couldn't put it down and finished it during the wee hours. [When bad things happen to children, it can be made more palatable by having a very young child narrate, as the brilliant Frank McCourt well knew, and as Heather Tucker followed through with.]

Our protagonist, Hariet with one "R," who becomes known as "Ari" (three letters within Hariet), soon begins to grow up and so does her narration. However, throughout the entire narrative, Ari continues to have an extraordinary way of expressing herself!

Ari is the youngest of the sisters: Jennah, June, Jacquie, Jory and Jillianne, all of whom grow up to be quite different in a family with abusive and dysfunctional parents.

Ari is "the richest of clay," who gravitates away from her parents and allows herself to be molded by the many true and beautiful people she meets. She's blessed by the influence of her aunts Mary and Nia, artists (and lesbians) who she lives with intermittently at their studio "Skyfish" in Nova Scotia. She's guided by her supportive educators. And she is supported by boyfriends, coworkers and some of her sisters.

The brilliant and beautiful Ari has a tough, TOUGH childhood, but it doesn't stop her from having courage, strength, hope and tremendous heart. In the midst of her own suffering she protects and mentors young Mikey when they both find themselves living in "crapdom." And she teaches Mikey coping skills; how to turn to his imagination (such as "Jasper," Ari's imaginary seahorse).

The writing is nothing short of SPECTACULAR!

I did find some of the adult caregivers in this novel way beyond the description of "perfectly imperfect family" members. Abuse on this level must be reported. Though "the system" doesn't always step up or follow through, the solution in this story is unique to this story.
2 people found this helpful
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Heather Tucker’s Clay Girl is powerfully written coming of age sure to keep you reading all night.

Ari Appleton is a survivor despite her horrible childhood. To say that her parents are unfit is a gross understatement.

Her father is a disgusting pedophile, and her mother is a selfish, uncaring addict. After her father’s suicide, Ari is sent to live with her aunt and her aunt's partner. Under their care, Ari begins to thrive. However, her horrible mother resurfaces and Ari is ripped from her aunt’s loving home. Back with her mother, Ari’s life becomes a cruel odyssey of abuse and neglect.

Clay Girl is lyrically written and full of quotable lines to be highlighted and re-read. In spite of the depressing nature of the story, I loved this book, it is quite possible one of the best books I’ve ever read. There is not a single wasted word then entire book. It is difficult to reconcile how such a heartbreaking plot can coexist with such uplifting, beautiful writing, but it does and it is wonderful.
2 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

So good I bought another for a relative.
2 people found this helpful
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Three Stars

Difficult to read
1 people found this helpful
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I was sorry when this book was finished. When does the next one come out?

My daughter and my wife kept raving about this book. I am currently making my way through a list of 501 authors that I am supposed to read before I die - sort of a reader's bucket list. In any case my wife and my daughter kept telling me to read The Clay Girl and I finally acquiesced. Thank goodness I took their advice. I literally could not put this book down. I read as a I marched around the track inside the Pan-Am Centre in Scarborough. I read it when I came home from the track. I read it as I lay in bed at night and I did not fall asleep. I read it at 6:30 in the morning before I went back to the walking track at the Pan-Am Centre. I am borrowing a line form my brother-in-law who once noted that he was sorry when the Count of Monte Cristo was over because he was enjoying it so much. Well I was sorry when The Clay Girl was over and I cannot wait for another edition from Heather Tucker. We all come from dysfunctional families - let's be honest here. Of course Hariet's family takes dysfunctional to a new level but if you cannot find yourself somewhere in these pages you are not trying very hard. Bravo Ms. Tucker, you have earned a bow. My big question is why this book is not taking the continent by storm. No slight intended to Canadian Lit - because it is really is first class at the international level - but why aren't Americans flocking to read The Clay Girl. I'm going to go out on a limb here and suggest that Heather Tucker would be thrilled if American readers discovered her. Have I said enough? Probably too much but this really is a book that should get you running to the bookstore. Don't use the library. Buy the book damn it!!!
1 people found this helpful
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Amazing

Wow. My book is so tabbed up with post its because of this great story. There are so many parts and passages that I want to go back and read that I had to mark them all.

I loved all the characters in this story, even the evil ones! The author, Heather Tucker, did an amazing job describing and fleshing each one out and they all took on a life of their own.

This book deals with coming of age, mental illness, alcoholism, abuse, triumph and even a bit of magic. I'm so glad I read it. Pick it up! You'll be happy you did. I look forward to reading anything this author writes in the future.

Thank you to ECW Press for sending this amazing book to read and do an honest review!
1 people found this helpful