"Both
a page-turner and also a canny portrait of the trouble perfectly ordinary people
can get into while trying to satisfy their perfectly ordinary needs for love and
security and happiness. It is no small accomplishment to portray the lives of
decent people and their poor choices in such a way that we continue to care about
what happens to them. The pleasure of this novel comes from Leavitt's wisdom about
the deep chasm of misfortune, her exploration of misfortune's steep slope and
her recognition that climbing out of misfortune's pit, step by arduous step, requires
a heroism that literature, with its capacity for rendering the elevated quality
of ordinary experience, can portray so beautifully. The characters are blazingly
knowable, and it is Leavitt's sympathy that gives her novel both its page-turning
momentum and its dignity"
---Carrie
Brown, The Washington Post Book World
reprinted in The Chicago Sun-Times
"A
complex, moving drama. Unpicks a legacy of tangled emotions and considers what
motherhood really means."
--The London Mail
"Heartfelt,
poignant."
--Marta Salij, Free Press/Magic 105.1 Book Club Selection
"Leavitt allows her novel to take grand shape, confronting head
on the sometimes maddening twists and turns life can take and the joys and sadness
our choices can bring us."
--Pages Magazine, Pages Recommends
"Provocative
and poignant. For bookclub
junkies, some challenging themes to be debated."
--Chicago Sun-Times
" Wise and honest. Original and new. Leavitt has a reputation for writing
real-life issue books. But here she does more than present an issue:these characters
suffer and triumph with difficulty and complexity. Engrossing."
--The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
"Poignant.
Leavitt examines a touchy topic with compassion, understanding and grace."
--The Orlando Sentinel
"Leavitt
has a sharp ear for dialogue and descriptive details. As the characters all try
to come to terms with the rich emotional cauldron of their lives, the feelings
they spark are familiar and resonant. "Girls in Trouble" deftly and
poignantly charts the slow erosion of familial ties and the lengths to which love
and desperation can drive us all."
--The Boston Globe
"A
novel rich with realistic characters, Leavitt creates a complicated tangle of
reasonable emotions. She offers readers an inside look at the struggles of each
central character and honestly details the complexity of needs and wants influenced
by human consciences cloudy with love and desperation."
--Small Spiral
Notebook
"Stark
and sure. Family dynamics are sharply observed, with an ear for nuance and an
eye for telling detail. Leavitt weaves a richly textured tapestry from the stuff
of daily life and ensnares us in its reality. The result can be wrenchingly poignant."
--The Raleigh News & Observer
"Emotionally
wise novel that will keep you glued to the page."
--Good Books Lately.com
"Compelling.
Leavitt's novel is a likable, flowing explication of the complex relationship
between mother and child, a bond that cannot be controlled or erased by anyone."
---The
Chicago Tribune
"The
strengths of "Girls In Trouble" lie in the questions it raises about
complicated love, both family and romantic."
---The
San Francisco Chronicle
"A
moving, suspenseful novel about the emotional cost of open adoption, Caroline
Leavitt's novel "Girls In Trouble" is written with insights of domestic
honesty that bring to mind Anne Tyler. Leavitt does a remarkable job of creating
characters so complex that readers will understand everyone's actions, and hate
to say goodbye when the novel reaches its realistic and satisfying conclusion."
--The Cleveland Plain Dealer
"Leavitt's
compassionate writing really gets us inside her characters' heads. She's exquisite
in her descriptions of the teenaged Anne's inner war over mixed feelings and loyalties
between her two mothers. Engrossing and deeply honest."
--Alphonse Vinh, NPR "Musings"
"Girls
In Trouble" is that rare combination of a literary character study and a
bonafide page turner. One of the title girls is Sara Rothman, a Harvard-bound
16-year-old who falls in love, gets knocked up and finds her life going crazily
off course. One adoption later, she wants her baby back, and all hell breaks loose.
If it sounds easy and cliched, it isn't. Think of Russell Bank's ordinary people
in trouble, and you'll get an idea of Leavitt's--except of course from her own
female perspective.
--The
Boston Phoenix, Editor's Pick
"A
piercing spin on the theme of Romeo and Juliet. Leavitt makes this story refreshingly
new. There are no villains here, just believable people trying to make the best
of a difficult situation and - children and adults alike - growing up and growing
wiser."
--Carole Goldberg, The Hartford Courant
"Two
paragraphs into the story, the reader is already in for a memorable ride. When
a story about the longing of first love and its sometimes unfortunate results
gets rave reviews from such a disparate group of readers it gets my attention.
Glamour magazine tells its readers Leavitt will "Get your book groups talking."
The Library Journal calls it a wonderful story and advises public libraries to
get a bunch of extra copies. Margot Livesey says it is "engrossing and richly
satisfying."
--The Knoxville News Sentinel
"The
sense that real life is being played out in front of our eyes among people we
care about makes Leavitt's work as gripping and suspenseful as any thriller. You
don't so much read about Leavitt's characters as live with them for a little while.Best
of all, truth seems to be Leavitt's only agenda. "
--David Forsmark, The Flint Journal
"Leavitt's
rich descriptions and poignantly realistic dialogue allow readers to connect with
each character on a personal level. Capitvating and uplifting, a must-read for
anyone who has felt the joys and pains of parenthood."
--The
Tulsa World
"The narrative is beautifully
rendered, making for a compulsively readable novel."
--The Albuquerque Journal
"Draws
the reader into the drama."
--The
Philadelphia Inquirer
"Richly
detailed and brilliantly controlling, holding the reader hostage to its passions.
"
--Lauren Roberts, South Coast Beacon
"Leavitt
displays her considerable talents for insight into the human heart. Clear, crystalline
style..we are in the presence of a writer who values words."
--Jeff
Minick, Smoky Mountain News
"Likable
and human. The book and the characters stayed with me."
--The Modesto Bee
"In
this wrenching exploration of parent-child relationships, Leavitt captures the
tensions and rhythms of family attachments--the unspoken language, the simmering
resentments and sweet hopes, the blinding, protective love that can both damage
and heal. Ripe for movie adaptation."
--Booklist
3
1/2 stars out of a possible 4--Bookmarks
Magazine
"Leavitt's
heroine was pregnant at sixteen, and so was I. How did she get my experience so
exactly right? She could have been interviewing me. This is the book that made
me not only want to talk about what happened to me, but to claim it."
--Suzanne Beecher, Working Mother Magazine and DearReader.com book club
"Given
the hot topic of this novel--open adoptions gone wrong, you'd expect a finger-pointing,
too PC-tone. But Leavitt's surprising take will get your book group really
talking."
--Glamour Magazine
"The
author does a splendid job at capturing the perspective of each person involved,
including the birth parents, adoptive parents, birth grandparents, and the young
girl who was adopted. Caroline Leavitt (author of Coming Back to Me) has
definitely brought her A game to the table with her crisp and intriguing
writing style. Captivating."
--Midwest Book Review
"The
story was so engrossing that I had trouble putting it down. High recommended to
fans of literary and contemporary fiction, and also a wonderful book club read."
--BookLoons
"A profoundly moving novel about
teenage motherhood, first love and the emotional consequences of open adoption,
this is a must-read for all fans of Sue Miller or Maggie OFarrel."
--Top ten selection, The Mango Book Club, UK
"Characters
so full and vividly realized, that they practically walk off the pages. Leavitt
is a microsurgeon of the choices we make that determine our lives' path. A novel
that is as compulsively readable as a can of Pringles is snackable --- but unlike
the Pringles, filled with substance."
--Bethanne Kelly Patrick, Bookreporter
"Leavitt
grabs the gnarled complexities of adoption and wrenches out a gut-gripping tale
of a parental love triangle gone bad. A complex story from a writer with a big
heart."
--David Abrams, Culture Dose and January Magazine
"Packs
a wallop.With heartfelt , but unembellished prose, Leavitt creates realistic,
memorable characters without villains or heroes. High recommended."
--Four
stars, The Romance Reader
"Rare
is the story that makes you feel for everyone, understand each point of view,
and not really be sure who are the heroes or villains. Should parents who try
to stop their children from ruining their young lives be allowed to deceive? Should
adoptive parents who are given the gift of a child be allowed to renege on promises
made to a birth mother? Do you ever truly get over your first love? Can people
make tragic mistakes and still be forgiven? Girls In Trouble is a thought provoking,
heart wrenching story that is frighteningly real. Nice people, nice town, nice
lives. It could be about your next door neighbor; it could be about you. "
---PICK
OF THE WEEK, GirlfriendBooks.com
"Touching
and compassionate. A wonderful read."
--The Book Review Cafe
"Emotionally
charged story about first love, resentment, self discovery, family and forgiveness.
Deeply touching, honest and memorable."
--The Celebrity Cafe
"A marvelous
study of who we are and how we hope we could be. Touches the pulse that lets us
know we're alive."
--The Compulsive Reader
"Beautifully
written. A modern day parable. If a book is to be judged on whether it makes the
reader think and by whether it expands the reader's understanding of people and
society, then this book is a winner. Highly recommended."
--Mostly
Fiction
"In
this pull-at-your-heart novel, Leavitt once again proves how adept she is at creating
fully fleshed characters. This is a wonderful story of family relationships, the
choices we make, and whom we can count on."
--Library Journal
"Poignantly depicts the
consequences. An unflinching depiction of maternal need and the dynamis of adoption,
this tale is a sharp reminder of the importance of honesty in life decisions."
--Publisher's Weekly
"Emotionally
introspective and thought-provoking. An eye-opening and heart-wrenching tale of
profound loss and rebirth. Readers will become completely immersed in this emotion-filled
novel."
--Sheri Melnick, Romantic Times Bookclub Magazine, 4 1/2 stars
"I
must recommend it for the story, the emotional ride, the anger, the despair, and
the dreamlike quality of Sara's existence. I promise that you will be spellbound
from the moment you open it."
--Story Circle
"Kept
me pinned to the page, swept along in an intense, emotional journey with characters
so real they seemed like friends. A beautifully written, moving and very wise
book."
--Kate
Grenville, Orange Prize Winner for her novel "The Idea Of Perfection."