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Hardcover The Sabotage Cafe Book

ISBN: 0375414320

ISBN13: 9780375414329

The Sabotage Cafe

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

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Book Overview

As a teenager in the 1980s punk scene, Julia suffered an unspeakable trauma.Years later, she has made a new life for herself in the suburbs, desperately working to maintain a sense of normalcy.But... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

"The thing that hurts most is other people's fear"

Set in Minneapolis, this dark and menacing novel is all about the anguish of a mother and daughter and the self-destructive paths they take as they navigate through their perilous existences. Sabotage Café begins just as Julia's rebellious teenage daughter Cheryl locks herself in her bedroom, packs her bags and then marches out the front door, deciding that she's had enough of her mother, all the while quietly cursing the woman's existence. We aren't quite sure of the events that have led up to Cheryl's sudden outburst of militaristic fervor, only that there's something about Julia's actions over the past few months that has caused her daughter to unexpectedly unravel. While Cheryl, complete with her backpack covered in graffiti and safety-pin starbursts, heads to downtown Minneapolis, to get lost, all Julia can do is watch her daughter recede, pulling away and willing herself toward a place where her mother will no longer be able to find or infect her. But it isn't that easy for Cheryl to merely cast her mother off at the drop of a hat. Both, after all, are tarred with the same psychological brush, with Cheryl's teenage defiance almost like a mirror image of Julia's own inclination for rebelliousness back in the early 1980's when she got into the local punk and new wave scene at the Minneapolis' counter cultural landscape Sabotage Café, the place where misfits of all sorts met and mingled. Now a respectable married suburban woman, there's little about Cheryl's obsessions and disarming ways that Julia hasn't already experienced. At first glance, Cheryl is simultaneously smart and scarred, somehow at once armor-plated and utterly vulnerable. When she finally disappears into the deep, dark shadows below the I-169 highway, Julia continues to watches over her, knowing deep inside that she can't really escape her mother's clutches even if she wanted to. "I live inside of her, just as she lives inside of me, " she says to herself as her husband Robert arrives home from work and blames his wife for his daughter's impulsive disappearance. Homeless and jobless and hungry, Cheryl eventually forms an uneasy bond with Jarod, a lonely and morose teenager, who along his pet dog accompanies Cheryl as she lives on the streets, scavenging for food and finding shelter where she can. Ultimately her friendship with Jarod leads her to fall in with a rat-tag group of post-punk anarchists who want to change the world as they lie, cheat, steal their way through life, and who squat in the deserted and dumble-down shell of the Sabotage Café, now boarded shut. Cheryl has this misguided idea that somewhere out there she is going to find a new vision of the world, "like a kind of Burning Man illumination." She could already tell she wouldn't find it with Jarod, but tt is here in the gloomly atmospheric Sabotage Café that Cheryl falls under the seductive spell of the cruel and machievallian Trent with whom she has a passionate and fiery affair and who represents

Fascinating and Brave

The Sabotage Cafe is a great, great book. This tale of a punkrock runaway in Minneapolis grabs your attention from the first page and never lets it go. If you've ever been that teen (or if you are) who thought music held the answer to everything and your parents didn't know the answer to anything, you should read this book. Really.

A Down and Dirty Coming of Age

Sabotage Cafe is, simply, excellent. I just finished it this morning, and, though I rarely feel moved to review books, it was that good: a powerful account of a mother-daughter relationship, told by the mother. One might have thought Furst had bitten off more than he could chew - by making his narrator not only female but also diagnosed with a personality disorder - but it's all pulled off quite miraculously. I don't want to give anything away, but: great milieu, great characters, and bonus points also for a beautiful cover - peel off the dustwrapper and you'll see what I mean.

Pulls No Punches

The novel presents a fascinating view of today's punk counterculture. At the same time, it's really about the relationship between a rebellious teenager and her mentally unbalanced mother. In fact, the novel is told completely from the mother's perspective, which may or may not be reliable. (I'd say the odds are on NOT.) The mother imagines the daughter's journey away from suburbia and into a punk demi-monde -- and Furst offers a critical and sometimes comical view of both worlds. The rupture in the bond between mother and daughter is ultimately heartbreaking. I found Furst's prose fluid and engaging, but emotionally he pulls no punches -- a soft glove, but clenched in a fist. Powerful stuff.
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