Author: | Lise McClendon | ISBN: | 1230000012979 |
Publisher: | Thalia Press | Publication: | August 21, 2012 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | Lise McClendon |
ISBN: | 1230000012979 |
Publisher: | Thalia Press |
Publication: | August 21, 2012 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
How do you know the person you're meant to be? Do you look at your family and run the other way? Can you reject everything you were ever taught?
The push and pull of becoming an adult on your own terms is the dilemma facing Jonny Knobel in All Your Pretty Dreams. His life so far hasn't worked out and his family wants him back to play his accordion in the polka band for the summer. He gets sucked into the family drama, and the tempting wiles of the college field team next door. The leader of the crew studying wild bees is Isabel Yancey, a rude city girl with her own baggage, including a rich family she despises.
In the spirit of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, small town life in All Your Pretty Dreams provides a rich milieu of confrontation, betrayal, humiliation, laughter, and redemption, as Jonny plays Bruce Springsteen, James Brown, and the 'She Likes Kielbasa' polka on his grandfather's accordion. What does a draftsman from Minneapolis, born into a cheesy polka band, have in common with a prickly, ambitious scientist who studies bees? How badly does she want him to breach her defenses?
Romance, humor, and the heartache of growing up make All Your Pretty Dreams a unique journey through the hearts and minds of young adults searching for the keys to happiness in a complicated world. If Elizabeth Bennett had been born into a Minnesota polka band, her story would be All Your Pretty Dreams.
Lise McClendon has published eight previous novels, including Blackbird Fly and Jump Cut (written as Rory Tate.) Her writing has been praised as "a lyrical, often humorous style." Bestselling author Michael Connelly called her writing "a richly detailed story that quite simply gets to your heart." Her love of family dynamics and the mysterious ties that bind us together continue to inform her fiction. She first read Pride and Prejudice as a teenager, and rereads it often, considering herself a rabid Jane-ite.
"Lise McClendon expertly probes the mystery of human desires" -- Michael Connelly
How do you know the person you're meant to be? Do you look at your family and run the other way? Can you reject everything you were ever taught?
The push and pull of becoming an adult on your own terms is the dilemma facing Jonny Knobel in All Your Pretty Dreams. His life so far hasn't worked out and his family wants him back to play his accordion in the polka band for the summer. He gets sucked into the family drama, and the tempting wiles of the college field team next door. The leader of the crew studying wild bees is Isabel Yancey, a rude city girl with her own baggage, including a rich family she despises.
In the spirit of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, small town life in All Your Pretty Dreams provides a rich milieu of confrontation, betrayal, humiliation, laughter, and redemption, as Jonny plays Bruce Springsteen, James Brown, and the 'She Likes Kielbasa' polka on his grandfather's accordion. What does a draftsman from Minneapolis, born into a cheesy polka band, have in common with a prickly, ambitious scientist who studies bees? How badly does she want him to breach her defenses?
Romance, humor, and the heartache of growing up make All Your Pretty Dreams a unique journey through the hearts and minds of young adults searching for the keys to happiness in a complicated world. If Elizabeth Bennett had been born into a Minnesota polka band, her story would be All Your Pretty Dreams.
Lise McClendon has published eight previous novels, including Blackbird Fly and Jump Cut (written as Rory Tate.) Her writing has been praised as "a lyrical, often humorous style." Bestselling author Michael Connelly called her writing "a richly detailed story that quite simply gets to your heart." Her love of family dynamics and the mysterious ties that bind us together continue to inform her fiction. She first read Pride and Prejudice as a teenager, and rereads it often, considering herself a rabid Jane-ite.
"Lise McClendon expertly probes the mystery of human desires" -- Michael Connelly