karen's Reviews > The Yonahlossee Riding Camp for Girls

The Yonahlossee Riding Camp for Girls by Anton DiSclafani
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bookshelves: free-from-work, girls-gone-wild, my-biggest-fear, icky-sex

i was honestly pretty let down by this. it was one of the "it" books from 2013, so i was expecting to love it, but it really fell short of my expectations.

this book is narrated at a remove, from the perspective of an adult character looking back over her life and the decisions she made when she was a teenager, but it is told in the immediate first-person tense, with these occasional and jarring interjections from thea-now that kind of ruin the flow, and it is a sort of flabby read, with scenes that neither progress the narrative nor show any real insight into character or period or purpose.

there is just something bloodless about this book. it's not that there's no story here, there is: it's about thea, a young girl who has lived for fifteen years in entitled luxury on an isolated estate in florida, secure in the love of her doting parents, beloved twin brother and her older cousin georgie, riding her pony and wanting for nothing, who becomes involved in a scandal and is sent away to riding camp as punishment, as the wider country begins to feel the strain of the great depression. it is about the long-term aftereffects of the civil war on the southern leisure class, and the expectations of young, well-bred ladies and how easily a reputation can be tarnished. it is about the dawning realization that wealth and status are relative and not indefensible. it is about that fragile state of sexual awakening, of knowing and not-knowing, getting carried away into insalubrious situations that snowball and digging the pit of shame ever deeper, not caring about the consequences.

which sounds like it should be excellent, yeah? but the problem is with the character. thea seems to oscillate between naive and calculating, kind and cold, self-assured and insecure on every other page. it doesn't read like thea coming into her own and changing so much as an author who doesn't know what kind of response she wants the reader to have to her character. is thea a wronged ingenue or a femme fatale? she is both, and it just doesn't wash. it's as though there are two characters competing for the same story-space.

the story weaves between thea's life at camp and her time at home before being sent away, which will (eventually) relate the events that led to her getting sent away (which is telegraphed pretty early, so not really a shocker). the only thing unifying the two storylines is the presence of horses. horses, horses, horses. there is a lot of detail about horses and riding, the ways in which the rider develops a relationship with its mount through a combination of understanding the limitations of a horse's mental capacity and the rider's cruelty, and the power that is felt once the rider overcomes the horse's reluctance and is established as the dominant of the two. which, you would think, would have been very easy to then apply as a narrative motif to the relationships thea makes with other people, but nope. not really.

and the ending?? just a mess, for me, with no reason for the decisions she makes once she leaves yonahlossee. and the biggest letdown of an epilogue ever. not printed as such, so i guess the biggest letdown of a closure ever. really flat and bleak without purpose.

there are parts i really liked, so it's not a two-star or anything, but after the first third or so, once i started seeing its weaknesses, i disengaged a little, and perked up for the nice bits, but then kind of submerged into reading for plot.

there were better books in 2013.

come to my blog!
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Reading Progress

January 14, 2014 – Started Reading
January 14, 2014 – Shelved
January 15, 2014 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-23 of 23 (23 new)

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Joanna I should have loved this book, based on the components. I most emphatically did not and it is for exactly the wishy-washy characterization you have articulated so well. Plus, I hate the all-knowing narrator constantly interjecting from outside the timeline, especially when the teasers about the "shocking" secret are so repetitive. I found her actions at camp to be more shocking than the secret that got her sent there.


karen absolutely, because they were undertaken with more knowledge and less true emotion. and her character was inconsistent beyond that of a young girl becoming her adult self and finding herself or whatever. it's not a terrible book by any means, but it's sloppy enough that i am surprised it received so much acclaim.


message 3: by Libbie Hawker (new)

Libbie Hawker (L.M. Ironside) Interesting. I picked this one up when it was a freebie and have never gotten around to reading it. Something about the whole idea just isn't grabbing me...maybe I'm sensing the wishy-washiness you highlighted here. It's leaking through the cover at me.


karen i was hoping for more of a "bad girls sent off to reform school" kind of story. but nooooooo!


message 5: by Libbie Hawker (new)

Libbie Hawker (L.M. Ironside) I was, too, when I read the description.


karen where are my lesbian undertones??


Denise I didn't care for this much either.


Alita Jade Martin What is this book about


message 9: by Paquita Maria (new)

Paquita Maria Sanchez Who punishes their kids with horseback riding? Oh, boo, I've misbehaved. Guess I have to gallop around on ponies for a few months now. Wheeee.


karen wealthy southerners in the 30's, i guess. it's better than a time out...


message 11: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth The title feels like that peculiar children one.


message 12: by Tracy (new)

Tracy I gave up after page 1.


message 13: by Mir (new)

Mir Elizabeth wrote: "The title feels like that peculiar children one."

That was fantasy, but similarly why-is-there-so-much-hype-about-this-mediocre-book?


karen oh, it wasn't good? i never read it, but i bought it because it was so lovely. as is the new sequel.


message 15: by Mir (new)

Mir It wasn't *bad* but it was nothing special.

I'm trying to think if I've ever been really impressed by one of the preciously-named popular books...


message 16: by Libbie Hawker (new)

Libbie Hawker (L.M. Ironside) Paquita Maria wrote: "Who punishes their kids with horseback riding? Oh, boo, I've misbehaved. Guess I have to gallop around on ponies for a few months now. Wheeee."

#firstworldproblems


message 17: by Libbie Hawker (new)

Libbie Hawker (L.M. Ironside) Miriam wrote: "I'm trying to think if I've ever been really impressed by one of the preciously-named popular books..."

I totally loved Tigers in Red Weather, the name of which is not as precious, but it was kind of the Yonalosswhatever Riding Camp of 2012. It was pretty fantastic.


message 18: by Erica (new)

Erica Miriam wrote: "It wasn't *bad* but it was nothing special. "

I dunno. I am tempted to argue that it was, indeed, bad.
Although, if I am going to get all up in everyone's bizniss, this is not the appropriate thread. There's an entire review comment section full of crazy for that, now.


karen i will check out that tiger book - i have seen it 'round, but never explored it.


and i just bought the sequel to that book youse are complaining about. but i haven't read either. i just like the pretty


message 20: by Erica (new)

Erica I saw your sequel in the hubris section of this weekend's AIFaF. I can't argue about the allure; it's what made me read the first book. I like the idea of using them to populate the shelf since they look spiffy, and all. They're much more useful as art pieces, probably.


message 21: by Mir (new)

Mir L.M. wrote: "Miriam wrote: "I'm trying to think if I've ever been really impressed by one of the preciously-named popular books..."

I totally loved Tigers in Red Weather, the name of which is n..."


That's from a Wallace Stevens poem, though; I don't think of literary allusions as being in the same category, usually.


Josephine Karen sums up the book exactly as I would if I had the words!


karen take all the words!


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