Description

Book Synopsis

Ida has a secret: she is in love with her best friend. But any time she gets close to intimacy, Ida faints or loses her voice. She needs a shrink. Or so her philandering father thinks.

Immediately wise to the head games of her new shrink, Siggy, Ida - and alter-ego Dora - hatch a plan to secretly film him. But when the film goes viral, Ida finds herself targeted by unethical hackers.

Dora: A Headcase is a contemporary coming-of-age story based on Freud's famous case study, retold and revamped through Dora's point-of-view. Yuknavitch's Dora is radical and unapologetic - you won't have met a character quite like her before.



Trade Review
In Dora: A Headcase, Lidia Yuknavitch gives voice to a Freud patient who famously couldn't speak, and presents her as a radical everywoman . . . Yuknavitch possesses a great well of empathy for misfits and a great passion for radical art * * Boston Globe * *
Yuknavitch has exhibited a rare gift for writing that concedes little in its quest to be authentic, meaningful and relevant -- Jeff VanderMeer * * New York Times * *
In Dora, [Yuknavitch] takes the most classic model of Thera-tainment, personal-crisis-as-content and she re-imagines it wonderfully reversed. The world of Dora is not just possible, it's inevitable. It's revenge as the ultimate therapy -- CHUCK PALAHNIUK
Dora is too much for Sigmund Freud but she's just right for us - raunchy, sharp and so funny it hurts -- KATHERINE DUNN author of GEEK LOVE
Yuknavitch reimagines the girl, the woman, at the heart of Sigmund Freud's breakthrough case study and unleashes this character's fury against a backdrop of hypocritical adulthood . . . I'd like to think she wrote parts of this novel just for me, but so many readers will feel that way -- MONICA DRAKE author of CLOWN GIRL
Dora is unlike any girl you'd ever dare to dream up, and Yuknavitch's full-bodied style of narrative, wrought with twisted grammar and jarring language, is disordered, unapologetic, and the only thing that could bring her to life . . . Yuknavitch has steered a new giant onto a literary genre's roster of teen anti-heroes, and created ten new meanings to the word "bad-ass" -- Electric Literature
[An] audacious first novel . . . Yuknavitch nails the whip-smart angst of a teenage girl trapped in a world both familiar and unique, and her ease with language makes her a prose stylist to envy * * Publishers Weekly * *
There's no reason for a novel to exist unless it's dangerous, provocative and not like anything that's come before. Dora: A Headcase is that kind of novel. It's dirty, sexy, rude, smart, soulful, fresh and risky -- KAREN KARBO, author of HOW GEORGIA BECAME O'KEEFFE
An irreverent portrait of a smart seventeen year old trying to survive. It channels Sigmund Freud and his young patient Dora and is both a hilarious critique and an oddly touching homage. With an unerring ear and a very keen eye, Lidia Yuknavitch casts a very special slant of light on our centuries and our lives -- CAROLE MASO author of DEFIANCE
Snappy and fun. I can pretty much guarantee you haven't met a character quite l like Ida before -- BLAKE NELSON author of GIRL

Dora: A Headcase

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    A Paperback / softback by Lidia Yuknavitch, Chuck Palahniuk

    7 in stock

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      View other formats and editions of Dora: A Headcase by Lidia Yuknavitch

      Publisher: Canongate Books
      Publication Date: 05/09/2019
      ISBN13: 9781786893321, 978-1786893321
      ISBN10: 1786893320

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Ida has a secret: she is in love with her best friend. But any time she gets close to intimacy, Ida faints or loses her voice. She needs a shrink. Or so her philandering father thinks.

      Immediately wise to the head games of her new shrink, Siggy, Ida - and alter-ego Dora - hatch a plan to secretly film him. But when the film goes viral, Ida finds herself targeted by unethical hackers.

      Dora: A Headcase is a contemporary coming-of-age story based on Freud's famous case study, retold and revamped through Dora's point-of-view. Yuknavitch's Dora is radical and unapologetic - you won't have met a character quite like her before.



      Trade Review
      In Dora: A Headcase, Lidia Yuknavitch gives voice to a Freud patient who famously couldn't speak, and presents her as a radical everywoman . . . Yuknavitch possesses a great well of empathy for misfits and a great passion for radical art * * Boston Globe * *
      Yuknavitch has exhibited a rare gift for writing that concedes little in its quest to be authentic, meaningful and relevant -- Jeff VanderMeer * * New York Times * *
      In Dora, [Yuknavitch] takes the most classic model of Thera-tainment, personal-crisis-as-content and she re-imagines it wonderfully reversed. The world of Dora is not just possible, it's inevitable. It's revenge as the ultimate therapy -- CHUCK PALAHNIUK
      Dora is too much for Sigmund Freud but she's just right for us - raunchy, sharp and so funny it hurts -- KATHERINE DUNN author of GEEK LOVE
      Yuknavitch reimagines the girl, the woman, at the heart of Sigmund Freud's breakthrough case study and unleashes this character's fury against a backdrop of hypocritical adulthood . . . I'd like to think she wrote parts of this novel just for me, but so many readers will feel that way -- MONICA DRAKE author of CLOWN GIRL
      Dora is unlike any girl you'd ever dare to dream up, and Yuknavitch's full-bodied style of narrative, wrought with twisted grammar and jarring language, is disordered, unapologetic, and the only thing that could bring her to life . . . Yuknavitch has steered a new giant onto a literary genre's roster of teen anti-heroes, and created ten new meanings to the word "bad-ass" -- Electric Literature
      [An] audacious first novel . . . Yuknavitch nails the whip-smart angst of a teenage girl trapped in a world both familiar and unique, and her ease with language makes her a prose stylist to envy * * Publishers Weekly * *
      There's no reason for a novel to exist unless it's dangerous, provocative and not like anything that's come before. Dora: A Headcase is that kind of novel. It's dirty, sexy, rude, smart, soulful, fresh and risky -- KAREN KARBO, author of HOW GEORGIA BECAME O'KEEFFE
      An irreverent portrait of a smart seventeen year old trying to survive. It channels Sigmund Freud and his young patient Dora and is both a hilarious critique and an oddly touching homage. With an unerring ear and a very keen eye, Lidia Yuknavitch casts a very special slant of light on our centuries and our lives -- CAROLE MASO author of DEFIANCE
      Snappy and fun. I can pretty much guarantee you haven't met a character quite l like Ida before -- BLAKE NELSON author of GIRL

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