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I like to keep a couple unread thrift-store Barbara Michaels Gothics around the house as emergency paperbacks, but unfortunately I think Here I Stay was the last one I had on tap and it turned out to be my least favorite of all the Barbara Michaels I've read ...
... here is where I have to admit that while I like to talk a big game about appreciating unlikable heroines, the real truth is that this probably only applies when those heroines are unlikable in ways that I, in fact, find likable. I genuinely think Barbara Michaels made a bold choice with Andrea Torgesen of Here I Stay! She's kind of awful in ways that are clearly very much on purpose, and I guess I respect that but I very much did not enjoy reading about her.
So, Andea has subsumed her entire life since teenagerhood into taking care of her now-college-aged younger brother Jim, and as a result is pretty unhealthily possessive in ways that have gotten significantly worse since he lost both his leg and his hopes of a sportsball career in a car accident. She has no time for outside friends or interests, and as a result resents the time that Jim spends with his; she's terrified of allowing him to do anything that's even a little bit dangerous; she knows she ought to respect his privacy but sometimes she's just got to sneak into his room and read his bad teenaged poetry ...
Anyway, the plot of the book is that Andrea and Jim move into an old moderately haunted building and turn it into a successful B&B, after which a political columnist moves in as a long-time lodger and falls in love with Andrea for some inexplicable reason, while constantly recommending that she might want to give Jim more space and freedom and opportunity to envision a life that's not just 'live in this B&B with my older sister, forever.'
I was really hoping that this would turn out to be the kind of book where all this resulted in Andrea developing interests and community and a sense of respect for both herself and her brother as capable, independent people ...
Unfortunately it was not that kind of book. Andrea never learns how to let Jim live his own life!
Instead, she learns to let him go ... WHEN HE DIES OF A BRAIN ANEURYSM ON THE SECOND-TO-LAST-PAGE!
Jim, it turns out, only survived the car accident so that he could die later after bonding with the sad house ghost and help her ... go into the light? Or something? Anyway, fuck the notion that Jim could have a whole and vibrant and independent future without his leg, I guess.
I did like the immortal cat named Satan who lives in the B&B's master bedroom. Also, the very reluctantly psychic local business owner who refuses to admit that she can sense ghosts and also refuses to ever return to any location where she did sense a ghost because she just Does Not Want To Deal With It and has been doing this her entire life, now she'd like to get back to running the town's most popular restaurant, please. I'd read the book about her.
... here is where I have to admit that while I like to talk a big game about appreciating unlikable heroines, the real truth is that this probably only applies when those heroines are unlikable in ways that I, in fact, find likable. I genuinely think Barbara Michaels made a bold choice with Andrea Torgesen of Here I Stay! She's kind of awful in ways that are clearly very much on purpose, and I guess I respect that but I very much did not enjoy reading about her.
So, Andea has subsumed her entire life since teenagerhood into taking care of her now-college-aged younger brother Jim, and as a result is pretty unhealthily possessive in ways that have gotten significantly worse since he lost both his leg and his hopes of a sportsball career in a car accident. She has no time for outside friends or interests, and as a result resents the time that Jim spends with his; she's terrified of allowing him to do anything that's even a little bit dangerous; she knows she ought to respect his privacy but sometimes she's just got to sneak into his room and read his bad teenaged poetry ...
Anyway, the plot of the book is that Andrea and Jim move into an old moderately haunted building and turn it into a successful B&B, after which a political columnist moves in as a long-time lodger and falls in love with Andrea for some inexplicable reason, while constantly recommending that she might want to give Jim more space and freedom and opportunity to envision a life that's not just 'live in this B&B with my older sister, forever.'
I was really hoping that this would turn out to be the kind of book where all this resulted in Andrea developing interests and community and a sense of respect for both herself and her brother as capable, independent people ...
Unfortunately it was not that kind of book. Andrea never learns how to let Jim live his own life!
Instead, she learns to let him go ... WHEN HE DIES OF A BRAIN ANEURYSM ON THE SECOND-TO-LAST-PAGE!
Jim, it turns out, only survived the car accident so that he could die later after bonding with the sad house ghost and help her ... go into the light? Or something? Anyway, fuck the notion that Jim could have a whole and vibrant and independent future without his leg, I guess.
I did like the immortal cat named Satan who lives in the B&B's master bedroom. Also, the very reluctantly psychic local business owner who refuses to admit that she can sense ghosts and also refuses to ever return to any location where she did sense a ghost because she just Does Not Want To Deal With It and has been doing this her entire life, now she'd like to get back to running the town's most popular restaurant, please. I'd read the book about her.
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NOPE SORRY OUT
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This is an interesting insight and I'm chewing it over in my mind! I feel like this is perhaps true of most people? One thing that has always struck me about so-called anti-hero shows (Breaking Bad or Dexter) is the fact that many viewers clearly do just plain like and root for these supposedly unlikable characters - the creators seem to envision some level of ironic detachment in their viewers that often isn't there. Sure, Dexter's a serial killer, but he's likable!
I definitely think many people are willing to cut male characters more slack in this than female, but there are for instance diehard Regina fans in Once Upon a Time. And perhaps this is a result of narrative cues as much as anything? OUaT spends a lot of time and effort making Regina a complex and multifaceted character, just like Breaking Bad and Dexter do with their leads.
... anyway, going back to this particular book, it sounds like Andrea is unlikable in a way that just isn't much fun. I feel like if you're going to do creepy codependent siblings, you'd better go full Merricat or go home.
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1. Vaguely incestuous codependent sibling relationship – check
2. Family tragedy – check
3. Female family member sacrificing all for everybody else – whether they want it or not – check
4. improbably successful, handsome, or competent male lead inexplicably attracted to 3 – check
5. Sudden, not necessary for plot, death that just sucks any possible joy out of the story – check
The psychic who doesn't want to be a psychic and therefore avoids places she has come across ghosts reminds me of a character in "He is Coming to Me." https://mydramalist.com/31880-he-s-coming-to-me
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The book in question is Elementary, She Read by Vicki Delany, first in a cozy mystery series about Gemma Doyle (only distantly related to Sir Arthur), English-born operator of a Sherlock Holmes themed bookshop on Cape Cod.
Although Gemma never describes it as such, her protagonist's superpower is that she has precisely the same knack for hyper-precise observation and deduction as does Holmes in the Conan Doyle stories. She can micro-read body language, identify accents at the drop of a syllable, extrapolate accurately from miniscule details of a target's wardrobe, and -- if forced into culinary duty by her best friend, who runs the tea shop next door -- will ask for a ruler to make sure the sandwiches are exactly two inches long by 3/4 inch wide.
The trouble is that Gemma's first-person narration (obligatory, since this is a modern cozy and that's become a Rule) makes her come across as alarmingly and unattractively self-centered. She can't resist correcting other people's imprecisions ("What high tea? Oh, you mean afternoon tea. You really shouldn't get those mixed up."), and imposes shamelessly on friends (finagling a last-second dinner reservation at the most crowded seafood place in town). So when she gets herself involved in a murder connected to the rarest possible Holmesian artifact -- an 1887 Beeton's Christmas Annual -- rather than admiring her deductive instincts, I kept wondering when she was actually going to get arrested for interfering with the police investigation.
One further complicating factor: certain aspects of the writing make me wonder if the author intends Gemma to be perceived as some flavor of high-functioning autistic, which would explain what sometimes comes across as a lack of personal filters where her dialogue is concerned. But the text gives absolutely no overt cues in that direction to the reader, so one can't really use that theory to mitigate Gemma's general lack of likeability.
Which is frustrating in the extreme, because as far as the mystery itself is concerned, Delany supplies a sharp, clever plot, a comfortable and convincingly drawn setting, and a likeable cast of supporting characters. It's just that I spent most of the book shouting metaphorically for Gemma's friends to stage an intervention on her behalf, and I'm not much interested in sticking around for more books (there are four or five at this point) in which they don't call her on her BS.
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I did like the immortal cat named Satan who lives in the B&B's master bedroom. Also, the very reluctantly psychic local business owner who refuses to admit that she can sense ghosts and also refuses to ever return to any location where she did sense a ghost because she just Does Not Want To Deal With It and has been doing this her entire life, now she'd like to get back to running the town's most popular restaurant, please.
and yet that sounds so tempting~~
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we were just talking about Clem???
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Though the cat sounds pretty cool.
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Very relatable XD
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HMMMM.
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Because god forbid a disabled character might be used as something other than a plot device!
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