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Downers Grove

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This dark tale of a high school girl’s coming of age in modern suburbia is “an electrifying portrayal of adolescent angst” from the author of Bongwater (Booklist).Downers Grove is the haunting and tender story of Chrissie Swanson, a high school senior for whom graduating has become a matter of life or death. She’s an unusual girl in an ordinary town. But when jocks are out to destroy her life in increasingly unsettling ways, and her high school seems to be cursed with a series of untimely deaths, you can’t blame her for being a little paranoid. Meanwhile, her mother’s sex life is overshadowing her own; her brother never leaves the basement; and her best friend Tracy is hornier than a Prince song—all of which leaves her eccentric grandmother as the only source of wisdom in a rapid downward spiral. As Chrissie tries to take control of the events that shape her life, she finds the events taking control of her, until she is finally cornered by choices with everlasting consequences. Full of humor, wit, and the sacrilegious worldview of a savvy teenager, Downers Grove paints a searing portrait of the American dream in all its broken glory.

244 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1999

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About the author

Michael Hornburg

5 books10 followers

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5 stars
42 (8%)
4 stars
93 (19%)
3 stars
175 (37%)
2 stars
106 (22%)
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55 (11%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 44 reviews
Profile Image for Lynette.
565 reviews
November 17, 2011
Wow. I can honestly say it's one of the worst books I've ever read. Forgetting the fact that I've lived in Downers Grove for about 22 years, this is the most ridiculous interpretation of a teenaged girl I've ever read. Yes, most teenaged girls are annoying and mean and rude, but she's just absolutely ridiculous. And the pop culture references are beyond dated.

Going back to the part about being from Downers Grove - there are glaring geographical and spelling issues throughout the book. I went to high school around the time that the book is set, and I don't know any girls who were like Chrissie. Also, Downers Grove is not that backwater town that Hornburg paints - it's quite a rich, upper middle class suburb, and has been for a long time now. There's so much to do within even a 5-mile radius of this very large town. Heck, when I was training for a marathon, I was able to run my mid-distance runs (10, 12, 16 miles) entirely within the village limits of Downers Grove. So there is certainly nothing "small-town" about it.

The only thing that I can this is that this takes place in south Downers, and I live in north Downers. If the kids on the other side of the tracks were like this, then I'm damn glad that I'm a north-sider!
17 reviews3 followers
April 7, 2009
No good will come of Downers Grove - the book or the town.
Profile Image for Chris.
91 reviews483 followers
May 11, 2008
William Morrow & Co – Fiction – 231'Du'Pages
I could have gone to the Brookfield Zoo and picked through some flamingo sh!t to yield the same amount of enjoyment as I did on this reading of “Downers Grove”. Not only is Brookfield Zoo in close enough proximity to Downers Grove to have made this a simple plan of action, but I probably could have started flinging the feces around and hopefully caused some sort of pandemonium resulting in a rhinoceros goring.

Proving once again that I’m a complete sucker easily swayed by the masterminds in marketing (much like my foray into “The Girl Who Owned A City”), I bought this book brand-spanking-new when it came out about a decade ago. How was I going to pass this treasure up? The book is called “Downers Grove”, and there’s no way you can pass up anything named after the illustrious “D.G”, a locale of ill-repute which has provided countless sluts for the strapping youths ranging from Lisle to Lombard to Lemont. Enticing. The cover boldly displays one of the more memorable landmarks of Chicago’s West Suburbs, the legendary Downers Grove water tower, and the water tower is also upside down. Incredible. The author has also penned what must be an exhilarating work called “Bongwater”. Promising. Lastly, the book claimed to concern the antics of the disillusioned youth living in the posh area I was reared near; it was obviously going to be choc full of punk-ass wanna-be-bitches glomming off their upper-class folks for money to buy smack with, the bawdy romps of the area’s high school ‘jocks’, the epic tales of juvenile delinquency spawned by the ‘skaters’, and probably some puerile assessments of life as told through the eyes of one of the areas worthless inhabitants.

I should have saved my money and gotten my asscheeks pierced.

This is the portion of the review in which I will spell out the things which didn’t suck about this book, and this ‘praise’ ends at the next use of punctuation.

As for the rest of the book; horrible. Easily one of the worst books I’ve ever had the misfortune to open. More than that, this is the worst book I’ve ever read twice.

Talentless hack Hornburg leads us through the tedious pastiche which serves as existence for aspiring riot grrl Crystal Methedrine Swanson; a flimsy and pitiful representation of a broken home, a product of DuPage county’s exalted educational system, and a moronic dingbat struggling to find her true identity. I can only imagine Hornburg and his buddies probably thought Chrissie’s name was a hell of a clever play on words, presumably while they were chugging bongwater and PBR. Then again, I’ve actually come across someone with the unlikely name of Mary Jane Head, but at least she delivered on her moniker; Chrissie isn’t interesting enough to have a riveting drug habit. Also, while I am hardly one to claim that I have even the slightest clue what is going through the minds of women, I think that Hornburg’s work with Chrissie might be the clumsiest attempt ever considered worthy of publication in all history. I found a lot of her thoughts and narration pretty inconsistent; here we have a 17-year-old girl who pigeonholes anyone with any visible signs of muscular development as a ‘mindless jock’ and openly mocks the concept of participating in any sort of athletic endeavor, but also makes countless references to sports minutia. I’m hardly going to qualify this statement by combing through this drivel again for examples, but she makes references to ‘winning the trifecta’, ‘like a bowling ball rolling towards the pins’, ‘like a baseball landing in centerfield’, and ‘getting tagged out’, along with many other bothersome references to badminton, football, jai alai, lacrosse, boxing, motorcross, rowing, track & field, swimming, diving, croquet, spelunking, squash, cricket, snorkeling, fishing, and I think she might even whip out an allusion to aerobatics and formation flying. You’d think a 17 year old chick with her preferences would say ‘like he won a date with Britney Spears’ instead of ‘like he won betting on the trifecta’ to express some clod’s glee. Basically, most of what Chrissie was saying was either stupid (most of the book) or made me think that the character was a 23-year-old dude that attends community college. It would have also been a benefit if Hornburg would have spelled Bolingbrook correctly even once within; he goes into incredibly boring detail concerning the streets and shops in the area, but the misspelling ‘Bowlingbrook’ just makes the work look sloppy and poorly researched.

So here’s the story. Chrissie is a senior preparing to graduate from high school while publishing some lame-ass ‘zine with her friend Tracy the trollop. Since the white man swindled the land from the injuns and began educating their young, every graduating class has suffered the loss of one if its members, and this year can either break the ‘curse’ or someone is getting iced soon. She’s on edge, she’s worried about the curse, she’s doing crappy in school, has no idea what she wants to do with her life, her dad has skipped town, her mother has begun dating an astronaut, her brother is a junkie, her grandma is an insightful weirdo that speaks in riddles, and while at a party, some dude makes a move on her which she immediately equates with impending rape and boots him in the balls. The guy corners her and makes momentary contact with her arm and boob, and her reaction is planting a foot in his crotch. “He buckled under, screamed “Bitch!” like it was my fault or something, and crumpled onto the floor.” Hmmm. Anyway, this meathead and his crew end up pursuing Tracy and Chrissie in a completely lame car chase, which ends with Chrissie wrecking their ride by tossing a car battery through their windshield. She’s freaked out more than ever that she’s destined to be the victim of the curse, and this feeling of dread is only heightened when the potential rapist and his crew begin showing up unexpectedly at places Chrissie is at, and they also set fire to her locker and drop some dead dogs in her front yard. Chrissie starts screwing a reckless mechanic/race-car driver in one of the most banal relationships ever put to paper, while her mom is busy letting her spaceman put his shuttle in her lauchpad and blast off. And that’s about it. She also briefly looks for her father in Chicago, throws a pitiful party, and ignores her brother as filler between encounters with her new love interest and the dudes looking to kick her ass.

I hate to recommend this to anyone, but if you’ve enjoyed mindless crap like “Apathy and Other Small Victories” by Paul Neilan, “The Fuck-Up” by Arthur Nersesian, or anything by Augusten Burroughs or David Sedaris, this is the book for you. The only benefit to recommending this to anyone is so that you post something on GoodReads about it for me to laugh at and reaffirm to me that the human race has earned its forthcoming extinction. Be warned; as bad as those books are, Hornburg’s ‘writing’ can only be described as Nersesian-Lite. I'd almost rather have Busch Lite than Nersesian-Lite.
Profile Image for Luigi.
11 reviews
October 24, 2015
Initially, Chrissie Swanson’s POVs in Downer’s Grove sound like Facebook statuses of a person we want to unfriend, but she redeemed herself by becoming interesting when she almost killed the guy in the neck brace. Like the usual outcasts from High School, she and Tracy are part of the hoi polloi. They don’t notice it, because they feel cool, yet obviously are otherwise because like most teenagers, they are stupid.

The whole school believes in a curse that before Graduation, an offering of life must be done; Chrissie then receives a plethora of death threats just a few days before this special day. Will she attend her own funeral or spend the remaining years of her life in jail?

We like that scene in the grassy fields on a rainy night when the tears just kept rolling down Chrissie’s eyes. She’s running away from her mistakes and the responsibility of embracing adulthood weighs too much for her shoulders. Likewise, it reminds us of our greatest downfall, although lost, we find ourselves following the right path through a smidgen of light from passing cars.

When everybody back in High School were puffing sticks, getting pregnant and becoming zit-faced adolescents, the worst thing one could do is to get someone nearly killed. The best thing that would happen is to fall in love with a mechanic.

But then again, Chrissie’s just a teenager. A permanent love story sounds fictitious or disposable—just like her Mom’s.

A movie directed by Derick Martini based on this novel is coming this 2014. We are not familiar with Hornburg’s Bongwater or Martini’s movies, and certainly this book did not stick memorable to us too.

More reviews: https://medium.com/@luimontoro
Profile Image for Vanessa.
172 reviews4 followers
November 29, 2010
I discovered this one while weeding, and I probably could have left it on the shelf. Coming of age tales usually interest me, but there wasn't much substance or character development going on here although it moved quickly and included references to the Chicago area. The book felt like it was written with a film adaption in mind, which the book jacket mentioned way back in 1999. Entertainment Weekly recently noted that the movie will be released in 2011; I hope it's tighter than the book.
Profile Image for Rose.
201 reviews8 followers
November 5, 2023
I'm feeling generous, so two stars. But guessing from the author's writing, I don't need to worry about hurt feelings because he's probably 80 now and waiting for god.

Where to begin? First, I'm not sure if the author even visited Downers Grove, and if he had, which decade he was there. There aren't corn fields galore. High school seniors aren't aspiring to be farmers nor probably even know any. It's a stop on the commuter train, for christsake--and it's not even the last stop.

At one point, the heroine's grandma gets a postcard from the MIA father... from Chicago. He sent a postcard from Chicago to Downers Grove, lmao. It's RIGHT THERE. It's Chicagoland. The grandma asks the Chrissie if she'd even BEEN to Chicago. Lemme tell you, it would be stranger if she hadn't visited, even if only for a school field trip. You miss a ramp on the expressway? Guess what? Chicago.

Downers Grove may have been this way decades ago, but it's a sizeable town. Leading to my next complaint, the author feels old. Multiple times, Chrissie calls the television the "boob tube." They don't have self-service gas pumps, apparently, since Bobby says he pumps gas for a living. Everyone drives stick. For a teenager, she mentions a lot of street intersections and county lines. No teen is thinking that hard about Will, DuPage, or Cook county. There were way too many old bands mentioned outside of Marilyn Manson and NIN to feel 90s like Pink Floyd, Prince, Madonna, David Bowie... Teens would've listened to that as kids or found it "uncool" to keep listening.

I gave it two stars because it is paced nicely and some of the dialogue flows nicely. However, the dialogue is also frustrating. Everyone talks the same way. The teenage girl talks the same whippy dialogue as the deadbeat mechanic. The girls were a little too boy-crazy to feel realistic.

Everything about the book is overwritten. The metaphors were ridiculous and often didn't fit the character. The descriptions were TEENAGER-1990-TEENAGER-TEEN GIRL-STEREOTYPE-1990. Here are some of the ones that made me put the book down:

"Wearing a tight lavender sweater over a black Wonderbra, a deep purple miniskirt, hot pink tights, and a candy bead necklace, she looked like a character in a new wave video... She sat down beside me, took a pair of scissors out of my Teletubbies lunch box, and started cutting pictures out of Seventeen and Jane."

"Beyond the long sharp fingers of the pear trees was a canopy of scraggy lilac bushes that marked the borderline of our yard. The branches looked like twisted wizard canes creeping up from some Gothic underworld deep below the surface of the clover-choked grass."

"Rain fell like the rivers of heaven had crested on and on with increasing intensity."

"I gave myself a fresh dose of lip gloss and whispered a mantra to the disciple of future boyfriends, but when I opened the door, I came face-to-face with Asha Lorenza. Flashing an uber evil smile, her icy vampire breath purred at the soft veins of my throat."

"Prancing back and forth in black high heels, acting as coy as a child in an ice cream parlor..." (what does this even mean?)

Again, two stars because the story got in, got out within a reasonable number of words, and I liked the ending.
Profile Image for Lauren Shawcross.
115 reviews32 followers
June 20, 2025
completely awful. i am not a resident of downers grove (which, despite being a rather affluent chicago suburb, is inexplicably portrayed as a backwoods small town here). thankfully i am not, as i'm sure this book would've been even more offensive. as it is, there is some of the worst grown man writing a teenage girl (in first person) that i've ever seen. the tone and dialogue are obnoxious, all the characters speak in the same (unbearable) voice, and what passes for "plot" makes little sense. although the book was published in 1999, the pop culture references would've been dated even then. apparently this was made into a poorly-received horror flick adapted by bret easton ellis- fitting, since BEE is name-dropped as one of the 3edgy5me cynical teen interests in the book. almost any other bitter, jaded teen narrator, even the speaker of a blink 182 song, would be more compelling than this.
Profile Image for Jo Besser.
659 reviews4 followers
October 2, 2025
I think I read this only because I saw the movie, and I wanted to know if the book was as big of a dumpster fire as the movie.

The characters are very one dimensional, there was no growth. I also think Hornburg discounted people knowing the area of Illinois. I'm sure there are parts of Downers Grove that's a dump, but nothing like this. I also don't think Hornburg counted on people knowing the layout of Illinois. Statesville Prison was mentioned in the novel, but not quite where Hornburg placed it. Not only that, I was trying to figure out the time period this was taking place, it felt like the late 90s but there were times that I wasn't even sure if that was the case.

If anything, it was a good way to kill time but the whole thing was sort of laughable. Makes me wonder if I was this annoying when I was in High school but I doubt it.
Profile Image for Monica Caldicott.
1,153 reviews7 followers
Read
April 30, 2020
Set in the Chicago suburb of Downers Grove, this book tells the story of Chrissie, a HS senior who is ready for a change in her life.
Read p. 1: “Lying in the yard … ghetto of meaningless.”

Chrissie and her friend Tracy think the handsome mechanic at the local gas station may be her ticket to somewhere fun, but along the way she has a disastrous run-in with some football players from school. 

Read p. 23: “Tracy turned on the windshield wipers … looks promising. I sneered.” 

Well Chrissie’s first impression was correct, and things go downhill fast. After a car chase and tossing a car battery through the windshield, Chrissie’s got an enemy for life.

A ripping portrayal of life in suburbia, told with excellent sense of what teenagers are really like.
Profile Image for Glendalee.
602 reviews5 followers
December 11, 2016
Some parts of the story was interesting. I always find it fascinating when I read a story and dislike the main character but keep reading the story because the character fascinates me at the same time...maybe that's just a me thing.

Anyway, I enjoyed the novel overall but I feel like it lacked a more focused plot. I get where the story was going and it had a plot but some of the chapters seemed scattered. The characters weren't fully developed especially the main character Chrissie.


Overall I did enjoy the writing style and the book had its moments.
Profile Image for Greg K.
4 reviews
December 5, 2025
Truly unremarkable in every sense.

A teenage girl written by a man goes exactly how you would think. A lot of forced metaphors, specific mentions of locations near Downers Grove, and a nearly nonexistent plot.

The only redeeming thing for me is the fact that I lived in Downers Grove, so I recognized the locations in the writing. Aside from the novelty of that, I really don’t have any positive feedback.

I finished the book and audibly said, “What was that?”

On to the next…
Profile Image for Ann.
62 reviews5 followers
January 25, 2025
I found this piece of trash in a little free library and decided to hate read it. The grammar mistakes and misspellings. The overwhelming nausea of a 40 year old man writing as a 17 year old girl. The complete lack of any redemptive qualities, such as insight, wit, or quality of writing. Yeah it delivered on all fronts. I'm glad the author never wrote another book after this.
Profile Image for Christina.
572 reviews72 followers
July 24, 2023
Really, really tried. But so damn tedious and I completely couldn't relate. Downer for sure. And I detested Holden Caulfield so any comparison to him already tells me to stay away.
Profile Image for lynda leech.
1 review1 follower
April 27, 2025
Awesome

Loved it and all the characters. Read it in two sittings. Main character was the greatest. Loved them all and will probably read it sgain.
Profile Image for Cassandra Fischer.
246 reviews2 followers
June 25, 2025
only fun part was i knew everywhere the author was talking about and could really picture it
Profile Image for Mrs. Dicker-Krase.
4 reviews8 followers
October 18, 2012
Downers Grove details the adventures of a high school Senior three weeks before graduation. Her life is one of dissatisfaction. She lives with her mother (her father skipped town when she was younger) and her stoner brother. For most of the novel she seems to be searching for purpose, and finds it in pursuing her crush on the mechanic at the local gas station. There is a lot of drug use, a sub-plot that involves a curse of one student dying each year before graduation, another sub-plot that involves a search for her father, and overall, many foolish choices. In the end Cryssie ends up graduating, but doesn’t seem to grow much as a person.

I rated this book a 2 out of 5 stars because despite enjoying the writing style, I found the plot to be redundant. At the end I was not convinced that Cryssie had grown as a character, and therefore the events she lived through seemed to be just another place holder in her humdrum life.
Thinking of memoirs, I wished that these weeks in her life would have shown more of an impact on her character. I know this book is a work of fiction, but it was a story that seemed to be focused on sharing a description rather than telling a story. Some pieces of writing are like this—I’ve even enjoyed some pieces of writing like this, but this particular book fell flat.

The quote that I would pull from the book, would be when Cryssie’s friend refers to her as “Downers Grove” referencing her town as identification. One the ways the author plays up Cryssie’s apathy is blaming it on the suburb in which she lives. Of course, living so close to Downers Grove, I was highly amused by the references to the Chicagoland suburb.

I would recommend this book to students who read and enjoyed Bottled Up, or students who are feeling dissatisfied with life—I think they may empathize with Cryssie more than I could.
Profile Image for Emma.
387 reviews23 followers
February 4, 2010
While at first I was really excited about reading this book and waited for it to come in the mail, it was quite a boring read to be really honest. I didn't particularly warm to the main character Chrissie, or her love interest Bobby. Their relationship could have been taken to a much deeper level but he was so using her and didn't give back. Other than that the story didn't exactly have a plot and I didn't much care for the on the side attempts to find her father, nor did I warm to her crazy grandmother who just seemed to pop into the story to give her good advice. Still, it wasn't a bad read. The writing style was good, with a few inspirational quotes which seem to have slipped my mind for now, but not really that similar to the blurb on the back.
Profile Image for Dave Schaafsma.
Author 6 books32.2k followers
September 27, 2012
I imagine Michael Hornburg is bitter about having lived in Downers Grove, as he creates a book with NO characters anyone would ever like. No redeeming qualities. One might be tempted to read this if 1) you hated upper middle class suburbs and you were hoping for a way to tap in to your own bitterness about such places or 2) if you were actually from or near Downers Grove, but trust me, when you are done with this book you will sympathize with everyone there AGAINST both the narrator AND the author. I know the author and narrator are not the same thing, sure... but trust me, this is a hateful book from any perspective.
Profile Image for Lyra.
762 reviews10 followers
October 20, 2012
It's not so much a problem of bad writing as some reviewers have suggested, but an inauthentic voice that makes this book maddening. The narrative voice was inconsistent and often times seemed like a stereotype of what a teenage girl should be.
As I read, I wondered who the target audience for this book was outside of people who lives in or near downers Grove, IL. The author's efforts to ground the setting with subdivision detail was just one of the many ways the author failed to make Chrissy a believable character, but if you ever drove the streets of DG you knew every building described in this book. I could go on, but why? There are other books to read.
Profile Image for Charlotte.
521 reviews29 followers
November 28, 2011
4/5 Stars

I read a lot of bad reviews for this book, but I actually did like it a lot. The writing wasn't perfect but it was interesting and different from the norm.

Negatives--It glorified some stuff that nowadays would /not/ be glorified. And there wasn't much of a climax either. Left some questions at the end, like it was all wrapped up too quickly.

Apparently it's going to be a movie soon. I'm looking forward to that.
I recommend it to people who like coming-of-age stories, books from the 19??s, and romance.
Profile Image for Andrew.
342 reviews7 followers
February 22, 2013
Good read - occasionally there were lines that blew me away in their succint and accurate capturing of how complicated teenage life can be, however dismissive and curt adults can be about it. Though it's been many moons since I was a teenager, I was jettisoned back to my late teens through Hornburg's wordsmithing - he did a great job of relaying the sense of unrelenting urgency that plagued so much of my adolescence.
Profile Image for Heather.
33 reviews2 followers
July 22, 2015
I gave it 3 stars because it was an easy read and I read it in one afternoon, so it wasn't horribly awful. I can't relate to the main character but it brought me back to a time period that I can relate to before cell phones and when Nine Inch Nails was playing on the radio. This novel is full of teenage girl angst written by a guy...hmm. It is a little too filled with the meaning of life and religion.
Profile Image for Keith.
165 reviews27 followers
February 7, 2010
Can't wait to read it. This is the town I grew up in and I am very curious.

Whoa. In the opening chapter they drove past the house I grew up in! Even went to my high school (without mentioning it by name), and had a great descriptions the Tivoli Bowling alley. A must read for anyone from DG!

Oh the story is your type teenage girl angst... but a pretty good one.
Profile Image for Emily.
45 reviews5 followers
April 6, 2009
I flew through this book in two days. I felt like at the end, the narrator summed up some things about her life/herself/etc that hadn't been fully explored in the story, but in general, she's an interesting girl carrying us along on her life in suburbia.
Profile Image for Tamara DeStefano.
Author 7 books3 followers
May 30, 2012
As a life long resident of Downers Grove I was very excited to read this, however, I was extremely disappointed. The author portrays the town negatively and has many inaccuracy. Trying to remove the emotional connection to the town, the book lacked substance.
Profile Image for Pasty Hag.
178 reviews36 followers
July 19, 2017
I was in the mood for stories about girls and young women in the 90s, and this scratched that itch. I think the bored-kid-in-the-suburbs vibes is why some didn't particularly enjoy this book, but that's what I liked about it. I give it a 3.5.
13 reviews
August 30, 2007
I picked this book up on a whim, and I really enjoyed it. I've read it three times now and I could not even begin to describe why I enjoy it so much.
Profile Image for Cat.
54 reviews11 followers
February 10, 2008
the only thing i liked about this book was the fact that i grew up in downers grove and could recognize all the places she talked about. otherwise this book is worthless.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 44 reviews

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