Category Archives: Book Chat

Review of SKINNY by Diana Spechler

Today I like: Bagel sandwiches
Not so much: Letting the cat out at 3am

I first heard of Diana Spechler’s novel, SKINNY, on Nina Badzin’s blog. As someone who struggles with the physical insecurities that plague most women, I was immediately interested. Send the characters to a weight loss camp, a fascinating phenomenon in itself, and I knew I had to read this book!

After her father’s death, twenty-six-year-old Gray Lachmann goes on a year-long eating binge. Desperate to stop overeating, she takes a job at a southern weight loss camp. Her mission: forge a relationship with the half-sister she never knew, unravel her father’s lies, and of course, get skinny herself. All the while, her infatuation with the camp’s one attractive man forces her to reexamine her relationship with her long-term boyfriend back in New York City. In the end, Gray must figure out how to manage not only her body, but her life.

SKINNY is not just about losing weight or feeling physically attractive. Don’t get me wrong, Diana Spechler tackles the painful binge cycles of the overeater with brutal honesty. Anyone who has ever eaten a carton of ice cream or a whole bag of chips will identify with Spechler’s perfectly phrased sensory descriptions: tastes, smells, the feeling thousands of grams of fat settling into your stomach. What I most loved about this book is how Diana draws comparisons with overeating and a general lack in one’s life. What can I use to fill this void? Food? Sex? Love? Gray seeks out all of the above. She overeats until she replaces that obsession with sex, and then she warps sex into love. All in an effort to feel “full,” when her problems are really about so much more than any of her so-called solutions.

I applaud Diana for her candid and spot-on portrayal of neediness and intimacy. Most people have been in Gray’s shoes at some point: trying to force a relationship to be more that it is. I’d be willing to bet many women (and men for that matter!) will read some of these scenes and cringe. “Don’t do it, Gray! I’ve been there!”

So, in general I just can’t say enough great things about SKINNY. It’s a wonderful book club read! The characters are unique and well-developed, the plot clips along with just the right amount of tension. Diana is a talented, insightful writer! I can’t wait to read her first novel, WHO BY FIRE.

SKINNY was published by HarperPerennial in 2011. Diana has written for the NY Times, GQ, and Details, among others. She lives in New York City. Follow Diana on Twitter at @dianaspechler, or check out her websites: www.dianaspechler.com and www.bodyconfessions.com to learn more about her!

 

 

Tell me: I shouldn’t like you…but I do

Today I like: Gregory Desmarais
Not so much: Gregory Desmarais

Some of you know Gregory, some of you don’t. If you haven’t been a Cracked Slipper guinea pig, let me fill you in. Gregory is my alcoholic Prince Charming. An interesting number of readers ask me the same question about him: “Am I supposed to like Gregory or not?”

I love this question! It means I’m doing my job. When you’re dealing with a character as archetypal as Cinderella’s handsome prince there’s a lot of pressure involved. Obviously, Gregory was not going to be the be-all-and-end-all of our five year-old dreams. On the other hand, I didn’t want to make him the complete opposite of the ideal. That would have been too predictable, and too easy. If my readers aren’t sure whether I want them to like Gregory or not, perfect!

Every writer knows our heroines/ heroes are supposed to be flawed. I’d argue that a lot of stories take the easy route by giving characters attributes disguised as flaws (the reckless spy is really just super-duper brave) or shallow flows (twenty-something gal buys too many shoes, runs up credit card, soooo irresponsible). Regardless, it’s not so hard to find flaws in characters who are, for the most part, appealing. It’s much harder to make the reader grudgingly root for someone who really doesn’t deserve it.

The first time I noticed this I was about ten-ish, and reading IT by Stephen King (yes, we all know I love Steve). Anyway, there is this kid in the story. Henry Bowers. Bully and all around fifth grade a***ole. Not a profound thought inside his thick, buzzcut-bedecked skull. Beats up on Bill, Richie, and poor fat Ben Hanscom. Not a redeeming thing about him.

However, even at ten I remember wanting Henry to come around. Really wanting it. In the case of this particular character, I think it had to do with a very sympathetic backstory (Runaway or dead mother, I can’t remember which. Crazy, abusive WWII vet father). I knew poor Henry never really had a chance. He couldn’t help what he was. So I felt sorry for him. I sort of…liked him.

I also felt this way about brilliant, charming Hannibal Lecter of The Silence of the Lambs. Maybe Hannibal really liked Clarice. Maybe she’d be the one person he wouldn’t try to eat, and even if he did, the guy was cool anyway. Eww, a cool cannibal?

On the film front, I love the HBO show Big Love. The acting is great, of course, but more than that I respect any TV show that can make feminist moi side with a bunch of fundamentalist polygamists. They’re consenting adults. Can’t we just let them live? Did I just write that?

So you get what I’m saying. I love Gregory, because I know him inside and out. But I want you to love him, too! Or maybe…sort of…do I?

Tell me…what character pulls you in two different directions?