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The New Girl

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It is the beginning of the summer holidays; Julia and her best friends Chicky and Rachel are school leavers, waiting for the exam results that will determine their future. Theyand their parentsare excited when Miranda, a charismatic and exotically beautiful woman from the city, arrives to teach a summer class. But Miranda is not exactly as she appears, and somehow her influence begins to drive the girls apart. The New Girl is a novel about girls and the women who shape them; about influence, identity, individual freedom and group responsibility. Emily Perkins brings her sharp wit and compassionate gaze to small-town life; the result is a compelling and touching read.

256 pages, Paperback

First published April 6, 2001

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About the author

Emily Perkins

26 books82 followers
Emily Perkins is a writer of contemporary fiction, and the success of her first collection of stories, not her real name and other stories, established her early on as an important writer of her generation. Perkins has written novels, as well as short fiction, and her writing has won and been shortlisted for a number of significant awards and prizes. She was the 2006 Buddle Findlay Sargeson Fellow, and she used the fellowship to work on her book, Novel About My Wife, published in 2008. She is an Arts Foundation of New Zealand Laureate Award winner (2011).

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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Venice White.
183 reviews5 followers
August 7, 2023
Julia, Chicky and Rachel have just finished high school and are anticipating a long, hot summer with nothing to do in their tiny town in the middle of nowhere, when Miranda arrived from the big city to take summer classes. A group of kids sign up, all of whom have never spent real time together before. Miranda challenges them to learn who they are as people and what they can become outside of a town they just happened to be born in. Her classes range from sharing their favourite colour and why, to the boys swapping clothes with the girls and vice versa.

The town is never named, the details focusing on the descriptions of heat and the way information makes its way through a small town. The three girls begin the summer as close as ever but Miranda’s arrival triggers a breakdown, as well as a breakthrough for all the thoughts and feelings the town hadn’t previously allowed Julia to explore.

Miranda reminded me of the glamorous and slightly aloof older girl that every young girl idolises. She spends weeks with these teenagers, getting them to open up and be honest with themselves so that they can achieve more than the hopeless town they happened to grow up in. Yet she shares nothing of why she chose to spend the summer with them and then ends up going back to the world she ran away from (which was almost always her intent). The lack of growth on her part is quite devastating when you consider her potential which is just as important as the recent grads.

Coming-of-age/rites-of-passage novels are often the most honest stories I read and I am constantly in awe of people who can capture what is the most confusing time for anyone and transform it so that the reader is both experiencing the rawness of being a teenager but also feels a great deal of fondness towards that time of life – and even sympathy for characters that would be nightmarish in real life. Reading this also gave me the delicious feeling of my creative brain switching on and made me want to write and write and write.
Profile Image for Dora Okeyo.
Author 25 books202 followers
November 24, 2012
I got bored in the middle of this book and had to set it aside for three days. It felt like Julia was busy trying to be Miranda, and Chiky couldn't stop cursing at everyone- and that made me lose trail of the story.When I continued, it felt okay.
Profile Image for Cheryll.
384 reviews4 followers
October 26, 2018
I was bored by page 74. I couldn't relate to the characters. What was the plot? What was the point of the story? I forced myself to finish it and actually quite enjoyed the last 50 pages. Doubt that I'll read other books by this author though.
Profile Image for Monica.
206 reviews
April 26, 2009
Not as enjoyable for me as her previous work and I don't quite know what the point was of this book. The boredom of adolescence?
Profile Image for J A D A.
170 reviews3 followers
July 14, 2020
I didn’t actually finish the book because it was wayyyy too boring to finish
Profile Image for James.
970 reviews37 followers
December 20, 2012
Author Emily Perkins (no relation) has written a coming-of-age novel about naivety, wisdom, and how things are not always as we think they are. Set in an unnamed, generic small town, and then in an unnamed, generic large city, the story centres around three friends: Julia, the talkative intellectual, Chicky, the buxom floozy, and Rachel, the quiet waif. The mix of types makes one wonder what they see in each other, but it's probably that they are all ostracized by their peers, and they found companionship in their refusal to conform. Their parents are on the sidelines, but they all have backstories with idiosyncratic difficulties that continue to affect them and their children today. Enter Miranda, a woman from the city, who has come to run a summer encounter group, but who ends up turning the hamlet upside-down, and fleeing just when it gets tricky - almost the antithesis of what she is preaching in her life-lesson class. Old or young, every one of the major and minor characters is deeply flawed, which makes it all the more layered. The narrative becomes a little messy towards the end and seems to flail about without a clear sense of purpose, but much of the book is well-written and interesting, aimed at teenage girls but still interesting to male readers.
15 reviews1 follower
July 10, 2009
Doesn't have quite the verve and tension of Perkins' "Novel About My Wife." But still, enjoyable characterization. I guess this is the kind of story you'd call a "slice of life" sort...which can be good, but occasionally doesn't really take you anywhere. It was very readable, but felt pretty anti-climactic at it's finish. The small town setting is interesting, and the author successfully conveys a sense of suffocation. (so so hand gesture)
Profile Image for Jade17.
440 reviews55 followers
June 11, 2009
The writing reminds me of an unpolished Siri Hustvedt... will read more of Perkins' work that's for sure.
1 review
September 9, 2012
Thought that this was OK, though not great. I haven't read anything else of hers though would still be keen to do so.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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