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Andrew O'Hagan : Personality
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Author: Andrew O'Hagan
Title: Personality
Moochable copies: No copies available
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 256
Date: 2003-04-07
ISBN: 0571219004
Publisher: Faber & Faber
Weight: 0.62 pounds
Size: 5.28 x 8.27 x 0.94 inches
Edition: Export ed
Amazon prices:
$0.78used
$25.51new
Previous givers: 2 jude (Australia), Brian Lockett (United Kingdom)
Previous moochers: 2 The Benjamin Andrew Footpath Library (Australia), Smudgeroony (United Kingdom)
Description: Product Description
Thirteen-year-old Maria Tambini - "the girl with the giant voice" - wins a national TV talent show, is taken to London and becomes an instant star. She sings with Dean Martin and tours America. Yet all the while she is losing herself in fame and waging a private war against her own body.


Amazon.com Review
Andrew O'Hagan's Personality opens on Scotland's Isle of Bute with three generations of the Tambini family struggling for success in their adopted home. The blanket of charm that envelops the Tambini's gradually discloses many secrets: forgotten children, torrid affairs, closeted homosexuality, and suppressed ethnic tension. Thirteen-year-old singer Maria Tambini seems to be everybody's antidote to past failures. After she leaves Bute for and audition with the television show Opportunity Knocks in London, she rapidly achieves both fame and fortune buoyed by a voice "like Barbara Streisand['s]" and charisma beyond her years. Friends and family mourn her loss to stardom while taking solace that someone has escaped Bute and achieved success as they imagine it must be on television.

But Maria's abrupt transformation into a personality leads to obsession with body image, clothes, hairstyles, and make-up; she sees herself as only an object for other people's entertainment: "Her body was apart from her. The person with thoughts was different from the person with arms and legs, a stomach and a face." For Maria, a life of surfaces, a life of pleasing, means self-annihilation. As her self fades into the image that others project on her, her body literally withers away.

O'Hagan experiments with virtually every narrative form in Personality (even including an epistolary chapter). Not all of these attempts work, and the story--driven by its strong characters and not plot--occasionally bogs down in details unnecessary to the development of either. But even in these rare lapses O'Hagan, whose previous work has been short-listed for the Booker Prize, carries his reader through his finesse with Scottish dialect and the wit of his rich supporting characters. --Patrick O'Kelley

URL: http://bookmooch.com/0571219004
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