
The Blue Girl
A novel by Laurie Foos
July 14, 2015 âą 5.5 x 8.25 âą 220 Pages âą 978-1-56689-399-2
A blue girl lives in the woods, eating secrets baked into moon pies, and shaking up a small lakeside town.
In this small lakeside town, mothers bake their secrets into moon pies they feed to a silent blue girl. Their daughters have secrets tooâthat they canât sleep, that they might sleep with a neighbor boy, that they know more than they let on. But when the daughters find the blue girl, everyoneâs carefully held silences shake loose.
About the Author
Laurie Foos is the author of Ex Utero, Portrait of the Walrus by a Young Artist, Twinship, Bingo Under the Crucifix, Before Elvis There Was Nothing, and The Giant Baby. She teaches in the low residency MFA program at Lesley University and in the low residency BFA program at Goddard College. She lives on Long Island with her husband and two children. Visit her website at www.lauriefoos.net.
Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please call (612) 338-0125 or email us at [email protected].
Reviews
Â
âWith spare prose and a keen ear for the clipped interactions of people in denial . . . Foos untangles the troublesome knot that binds the families together one kinked strand at a time. Foos effortlessly inserts a humanized sin-eater into the center of a complex, emotionally volatile group of families, creating a work that is haunting and healing in equal measure.â âKirkus
âFoosâ prose has an ethereal quality as she describes the person in the woods, and the allure surrounding her always. . . . This novel is not so much a puzzle to be solved as it is an experience to be had. Something to be tasted and consumed, crumbs falling by the wayside along with our useless insecurities.â âNPR
âFoos has found her way into a different kind of surrealist story, one in which the prose has a rhythmic lilt, one that never rushes, but lingers inside the minds of the characters, uncovers their secrets one by one, and floats on their interweaving narratives.â âNewfound Journal
â[The Blue Girl] winds beautiful prose with the stark, sorrowful imagery of loss, misunderstanding, and the ever-tightening, close-to-breaking ties of family.â âFull Stop
âTold in alternating points of view, The Blue Girl explores how these relationships both define and confine each of the women. Foos has crafted a surreal story that is suffocating yet utterly compelling.â âShelf Awareness
âThe Blue Girl such an emotionally driven experience is the elegant language and creative use of metaphor. . . . I recommend Laurie Foosâ The Blue Girl as a novel that tells a familiar story of grief in a unique way through an incredibly genuine set of female voices.â âBlotterature
âLaurie Foos is a weird Midasâeverything she touches turns strange. . . . Â Each novel is as hysterical, weird, and heartbreaking as the last.â âThe Rumpus
âInventively told from six perspectives, Laurie Foosâs engaging novel The Blue Girl is a surreal yet very readable account of secrets and despair.â âLargehearted Boy
âThe prose is clean, exacting and approachable, which makes the arrangement of the bookâand the swirling vortex of complicated psychologiesâeven more impressive and heartbreaking.â âStar TribuneÂ
âReading Laurie Foosâ The Blue Girl is like peering into someone elseâs dream . . . an entrancing experience.â âNomadic Press
âPart fantasy, totally fantastical, this is a book that will give your sweet tooth a twinge of the rottenness . . . and a taste of the dark secrets unsaid, especially those between mothers and daughters.â âThe Riveter
âTo put it plainly, Laurie Foos has written a stunning novel about despair.â âEntropy
âIf The Blue Girl resists the gratifications of ârealismâ and its click-shut resolutions, she goes further by using language to let us experience the desires embedded in our deprivations.â âOn the Seawall
âAt turns lyrical, absurd, and heartbreaking, her fabulist novel about this strange blue girl explores the strangeness in all of us.â âMemorious Blog
âStrangely beautiful. . . . Foosâs talent for both subtle and fantastical imagery, the novel really feels like an unpredictable and emotional thrill ride.â âNewPages
âFoos strikes a brilliant balance in acknowledging common similarities while also infusing her novel with overarching themes and big questions, all wrapped up in her fantastical blue girl.â âRiver City Reading
âThe Blue Girl such an emotionally driven experience is the elegant language and creative use of metaphor. . . . I recommend Laurie Foosâ The Blue Girl as a novel that tells a familiar story of grief in a unique way through an incredibly genuine set of female voices.â âBlottature
âAlthough the premise is fantastical, Foos grounds it in the relationships (and secrets) within families, especially between mothers and daughters.â âBookPage
âLaurie Foos has a knack for the surreal with a side of feminism.â âDame Magazine
âA strange dark modern day fairy tale. . . . Dreamlike and sensory.â âKAXE Northern Community Radio
âThe novel deeply understands what it is to be a woman struggling with her role as wife and mother. . . . [It] impresses on its readers the strength that a secret can tangibly and physically carryâenough weight to make up an ingredient in a cake.â âSamantha Preddie
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Description
A novel by Laurie Foos
July 14, 2015 âą 5.5 x 8.25 âą 220 Pages âą 978-1-56689-399-2
A blue girl lives in the woods, eating secrets baked into moon pies, and shaking up a small lakeside town.
In this small lakeside town, mothers bake their secrets into moon pies they feed to a silent blue girl. Their daughters have secrets tooâthat they canât sleep, that they might sleep with a neighbor boy, that they know more than they let on. But when the daughters find the blue girl, everyoneâs carefully held silences shake loose.
About the Author
Laurie Foos is the author of Ex Utero, Portrait of the Walrus by a Young Artist, Twinship, Bingo Under the Crucifix, Before Elvis There Was Nothing, and The Giant Baby. She teaches in the low residency MFA program at Lesley University and in the low residency BFA program at Goddard College. She lives on Long Island with her husband and two children. Visit her website at www.lauriefoos.net.
Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please call (612) 338-0125 or email us at [email protected].
Reviews
Â
âWith spare prose and a keen ear for the clipped interactions of people in denial . . . Foos untangles the troublesome knot that binds the families together one kinked strand at a time. Foos effortlessly inserts a humanized sin-eater into the center of a complex, emotionally volatile group of families, creating a work that is haunting and healing in equal measure.â âKirkus
âFoosâ prose has an ethereal quality as she describes the person in the woods, and the allure surrounding her always. . . . This novel is not so much a puzzle to be solved as it is an experience to be had. Something to be tasted and consumed, crumbs falling by the wayside along with our useless insecurities.â âNPR
âFoos has found her way into a different kind of surrealist story, one in which the prose has a rhythmic lilt, one that never rushes, but lingers inside the minds of the characters, uncovers their secrets one by one, and floats on their interweaving narratives.â âNewfound Journal
â[The Blue Girl] winds beautiful prose with the stark, sorrowful imagery of loss, misunderstanding, and the ever-tightening, close-to-breaking ties of family.â âFull Stop
âTold in alternating points of view, The Blue Girl explores how these relationships both define and confine each of the women. Foos has crafted a surreal story that is suffocating yet utterly compelling.â âShelf Awareness
âThe Blue Girl such an emotionally driven experience is the elegant language and creative use of metaphor. . . . I recommend Laurie Foosâ The Blue Girl as a novel that tells a familiar story of grief in a unique way through an incredibly genuine set of female voices.â âBlotterature
âLaurie Foos is a weird Midasâeverything she touches turns strange. . . . Â Each novel is as hysterical, weird, and heartbreaking as the last.â âThe Rumpus
âInventively told from six perspectives, Laurie Foosâs engaging novel The Blue Girl is a surreal yet very readable account of secrets and despair.â âLargehearted Boy
âThe prose is clean, exacting and approachable, which makes the arrangement of the bookâand the swirling vortex of complicated psychologiesâeven more impressive and heartbreaking.â âStar TribuneÂ
âReading Laurie Foosâ The Blue Girl is like peering into someone elseâs dream . . . an entrancing experience.â âNomadic Press
âPart fantasy, totally fantastical, this is a book that will give your sweet tooth a twinge of the rottenness . . . and a taste of the dark secrets unsaid, especially those between mothers and daughters.â âThe Riveter
âTo put it plainly, Laurie Foos has written a stunning novel about despair.â âEntropy
âIf The Blue Girl resists the gratifications of ârealismâ and its click-shut resolutions, she goes further by using language to let us experience the desires embedded in our deprivations.â âOn the Seawall
âAt turns lyrical, absurd, and heartbreaking, her fabulist novel about this strange blue girl explores the strangeness in all of us.â âMemorious Blog
âStrangely beautiful. . . . Foosâs talent for both subtle and fantastical imagery, the novel really feels like an unpredictable and emotional thrill ride.â âNewPages
âFoos strikes a brilliant balance in acknowledging common similarities while also infusing her novel with overarching themes and big questions, all wrapped up in her fantastical blue girl.â âRiver City Reading
âThe Blue Girl such an emotionally driven experience is the elegant language and creative use of metaphor. . . . I recommend Laurie Foosâ The Blue Girl as a novel that tells a familiar story of grief in a unique way through an incredibly genuine set of female voices.â âBlottature
âAlthough the premise is fantastical, Foos grounds it in the relationships (and secrets) within families, especially between mothers and daughters.â âBookPage
âLaurie Foos has a knack for the surreal with a side of feminism.â âDame Magazine
âA strange dark modern day fairy tale. . . . Dreamlike and sensory.â âKAXE Northern Community Radio
âThe novel deeply understands what it is to be a woman struggling with her role as wife and mother. . . . [It] impresses on its readers the strength that a secret can tangibly and physically carryâenough weight to make up an ingredient in a cake.â âSamantha Preddie











