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Eliot's Banana by Heather Swain β€” book cover

Eliot's Banana

by Heather Swain
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Synopsis

Things should be peachy.

Junie isn't entirely sure what her problem is. She's just moved into a Brooklyn apartment with her cool longtime boyfriend Leon, a drummer who adores her. She flits through a string of temp jobs in funky thrift store clothes. But beneath her veneer of quirky humor there's a nagging feeling of dissatisfaction about her life.

She's about to go bananas.

When Junie meets Eliot, who is twice her age, and his cat, Alfie, at the vet's office, she's convinced she's found the zest missing in her life. A burnt-out sci-fi writer in search of a muse, Eliot is apples to Leon's oranges. It's not long before Junie's standing in his kitchen being offered a banana...and then some.

Losing herself in the mayhem of a fling, Junie slowly realizes that kinky diversions are a poor distraction from what's really eating her. Only when she stops obsessing about Eliot and starts peeling away the layers of her family's past will she see that what she really wants has been waiting for her all along...and that her future's ripe with possibilities.

Kirkus Reviews

Engaging debut about death, modern romance, and growing up. Junie, 25 and directionless, has yet to find herself and can't quite embrace the good times with devoted live-in boyfriend Leon, a drummer who secretly dreams of leaving NYC with her to start a family and a restaurant in a small town. Junie fantasizes instead about Eliot, an embittered, middle-aged writer whose greatest success, a soft-core SF novel, is more than 20 years behind him. She perceives Elliot as potentially life-changing, while he's just looking for his latest muse/plaything. Startlingly, while they carry on their flirtation, Eliot's cat Alfie recognizes Junie as his soulmate from a past life; trapped in a feline body, he narrates his tragicomic frustration as he tries to be seen, win her back, and warn her away from Eliot. Following the affair's anticlimactic consummation, Junie turns to her real issues: she cannot move past the death of her little brother when she was eight and needs to confront her parents about screwing her up thereafter. A trip back to Indiana and a conversation with her mother are enough to move our heroine up a step on the emotional maturity ladder; she returns to Leon, ready now for what he offers her. To her credit, Swain wears her knowingness like a loose garment: set in Williamsburg, New York City's latest hipster hotbed, with a shaven-headed, goateed, rock-'n'-roll drummer love object and up-to-the-minute secondary characters like his bandmates in Mr. Whipple, the wealth of trendy how-they-live-now detail remains supporting texture rather than shiny distractions to the reasonably entertaining action. Romance fiction right on target for rocker girls with a little therapy under their belts.Agent: Megan Buckley/Sheree Bykofsky Associates

About the Author, Heather Swain

Heather Swain lives with the loves of her life — her husband, her new daughter, and her dog — in a crooked house in Brooklyn, New York. Her fiction, nonfiction, and personal essays have appeared in books, magazines, literary journals, and online. Luscious Lemon is her second novel. Her first, Eliot's Banana, is also available from Downtown Press.

You can visit Heather anytime at HeatherSwain.com

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Book Details

Published
September 1, 2003
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Trade
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780641679063

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