DEBUT At 17, Mae is living an aimless and dissatisfied life in 1960s New York. She feels like an outsider at school and is unhappy living at home with her mother, who is addicted to alcohol, and with her mother’s on-again, off-again boyfriend Mikey. As Mae searches for some purpose in her life, a series of random events lands her a job in the Factory, artist Andy Warhol’s studio, where she works as a typist transcribing tapes for Warhol’s book. There she befriends Shelley, another typist, and the two become voyeurs to and peripheral participants in the artistic chaos that is Warhol’s loft. Mae becomes increasingly obsessed with what she is transcribing, to the point that the tapes become her entire world. When the transcription is finished, and Mae’s role in the Factory is over, she struggles to regain her sense of self. Flattery (author of the story collection
Show Them a Good Time) provides a harsh look at the line between art and voyeurism and the struggle to define oneself in a world of overwhelming influences. Given the setting, one would expect vibrant descriptions of 1960s counterculture. Instead, the novel provides an introspective take on the period and, like modern art, forces readers to look inside themselves for the meaning of the broad strokes on the page.
VERDICT For fans of literary fiction and coming-of-age stories.
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