The beguiling fourteen-year-old narrator of In Zanesville is a late bloomer.
With dry wit and piercing observation, Jo Ann Beard shows us that in the seemingly quiet streets of America\'s innumerable Zanesvilles is a world of wonders, and that within the souls of the awkward and the overlooked often burns something radiant and unforgettable..
In time, their friendship is tested -- by their families\' claims on them, by a clique of popular girls who stumble upon them as if they were found objects, and by the first, startling, subversive intimations of womanhood.
Luckily, she has a best friend, a similarly undiscovered girl with whom she shares the everyday adventures of a 1970s American girlhood, incidents through which a world is revealed, and character is forged.
She is used to flying under the radar-a sidekick, a third wheel, a marching band dropout, a disastrous babysitter, the kind of girl whose Eureka moment is the discovery that fudge can\'t be said with an English accent.
The beguiling fourteen-year-old narrator of In Zanesville is a late bloomer