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 Books: The Last Girls
by Lee Smith

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  • Hardcover: 384 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.44 x 9.32 x 6.40
  • Publisher: Algonquin Books; Good Morning America edition (January 2, 2003)
  • In-Print Editions: Audio Cassette (Abridged), Audio Cassette (Unabridged), Audio CD (Abridged), Hardcover (Large Print)|All Editions
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Review

Amazon.com
In the brisk and readable The Last Girls, acclaimed Southern writer Lee Smith reunites four college suitemates on a boat tour of the mighty Mississippi. Thirty-five years before, inspired by reading Twain's Huckleberry Finn in class (a detail not nearly revisited enough), the women floated down the same river on a manmade raft; now they are gathered at the request of their recently deceased ringleader's husband. The story unfolds through the eyes of each woman as the old friends weave college memories with their own dramas spanning the three decades since graduation. Harriet, Courtney, Catherine, and Anna come through muddily compared to their dead friend Baby. Even in death, Baby, a Sylvia Plath-like creature with voracious appetites for poetry, self-mutilation, and sex, nearly overwhelms her more reticent friends with past behaviors better suited to a mental institution than a dorm room. As the tour boat bobs along in the wake of these women's emotional crises, Smith offers up the contemporary female life experience, fivefold. At its heart, this is a book about how we never quite outgrow the past, even after plenty of chances to do otherwise. --Emily Russin

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