April 5, 2012

Review: Various Positions by Martha Schabas

Summary-
Nuanced, fresh, and gorgeously well-written, Martha Schabas' extraordinary debut novel takes us inside the beauty and brutality of professional ballet, and the young women striving to make it in that world. Shy and introverted, and trapped between the hyper-sexualized world of her teenaged friends and her dysfunctional family, Georgia is only at ease when she's dancing. Fortunately, she's an unusually talented and promising dancer. When she is accepted into the notoriously exclusive Royal Ballet Academy--Canada's preeminent dance school--Georgia thinks she has made the perfect escape. In ballet, she finds the exhilarating control and power she lacks elsewhere in her life: physical, emotional and, increasingly, sexual.

This dynamic is nowhere more obvious than in Georgia's relationship with Artistic Director Roderick Allen. As Roderick singles her out as a star and subjects her to increasingly vicious training, Georgia obsesses about becoming his perfect student, disciplined and sexless. But a disturbing incident with a stranger on the subway, coupled with her dawning recognition of the truth of her parents' unhappy marriage, causes her to radically reassess her ideas about physical boundaries--a reassessment that threatens both Roderick's future at the academy and Georgia's ambitions as a ballerina.

Review-
This book shows what can happen when actions and words are misinterpreted. It's not a book I would suggest for our library just because some of the students here wouldn't be able to handle some of the imagery. Overall though it teaches a good lesson.

Publisher-Doubleday Canada
Reviewer Rating: 3 Stars
Reviewed by~Destiny Beaudoin( Student at Franklin High School)
~Thank you to the publisher for the donation of this book to the Read for your future book program!~


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