A Summer of Art: Same Difference

A Review of Same Difference by Siobhan Vivian

PUSH (Scholastic), 2009

By REBECCA, April 4, 2012

Same Difference Siobhan Vivian

The List Siobhan VivianI’m reviewing Same Difference in celebration of Siobhan Vivian’s The List, which came out on April 1st. Make sure to check back on Friday when we will be interviewing Siobhan! Note: We have two copies of The List to give away on Friday, so start thinking about your best high school stories to leave in the comments. Two lucky winners will win The List!

characters

Emily: Sheltered suburbanite torn between her newfound love of art and what people expect of her

Meg: Emily’s best friend who loves their New Jersey town, Emily, and her boyfriend, Rick

Fiona: Overly confident art student with control issues whom Emily worships

Robyn: Fiona’s sidekick, an art gallery-orphan with a snarky streak

Adrian: Awestruck art boy with a major crush on Fiona and a talent for comics

Yates: Emily’s TA/crush who gives her confidence in her art . . . and turns her into some

Claire: Emily’s sporty little sis who supports her summer transformation

Love Park, Philadelphia Robert Indianahook

It may only be a quick train ride from Emily’s home in suburban NJ to her summer art program in Philadelphia, but a lot can change in one summer. Especially with a new friend like Fiona . . .

worldview

Starbucks Siobhan Vivian Same DifferenceEmily is an observant and talented girl who has always been happy with her life, hanging out with her best friend, Meg, at the pool and the local Starbucks and buying the same tank top in different colors. When Emily begins to explore her artistic talents in Philadelphia, all the things that once felt personal to her and Meg begin to feel generic, boring, and chosen for her, like her rosebud wallpaper and bedroom set. When Emily turn her powers of observation on her own life and habits—to say nothing of her tank tops—she finds them wanting. The trouble is that for every thing she learns about herself she grows more apart from Meg and her old life.

Siobhan Vivian Same DifferenceSame Difference is the story of a growth spurt. It’s unavoidable and uncomfortable, but once the immediate pain is over you wonder how you were ever anything else. Siobhan Vivian’s world building is wonderful, particularly her ability to render the same places different as Emily grows. On her first day in the city, Philadelphia seems scary and foreign to Emily and so does her art class:

“I unload a few supplies, like a big drawing pad and the red plastic art box that holds my pencils and brushes. Glancing around the room, I notice I’m the only one with brand-new, untouched materials—paintbrushes wrapped in plastic, tubes of paint that need to be peeled open, unsharpened pencils. I’m a screaming newbie. I decide not to put on my smock, since no one else is wearing one.

Five more minutes and the classroom is practically full. Pixie Girl with the red scarf enters the room huffing and puffing, I guess because she had to take the stairs. She climbs onto a stool right next to Shadow Girl. Their eyes scan each other briefly before they nod and roll their eyes, as if they’ve just shared a silent joke . . . They seem like they should be friends” (39).

But then, when she gets home to New Jersey, instead of feeling like her old self, her friends seem just as alien to her.

I think Emily’s a brave character for Vivian to write. She’s so malleable and eager to be . . . cooler, for lack of a better word, that it would be easy for her to be a total dishrag, or to be unsympathetic. Instead, Vivian manages to tap into that exquisite humiliation that I’m sure we all remember from high school: of wanting to seem like a new mode of self-expression is a totally natural extension of our selves. Same Difference is a great entry into the wonderful category of books that map super-intense, almost romantic female friendships that involve the characters expressing their identities in their developing tastes (in music, books, fashion, etc.). I’m totally a fan of these books because they manage to capture that elusive time when a new friend could totally revolutionize the way you saw the world.

what was this book’s intention? did it live up to that intention?

Siobhan Vivian Same DifferenceSame Difference reminds us of how contingent everything is. If Emily hadn’t gone to this summer art program, would she have ended up a totally different person with a totally different life? If she’d become best friends with Adrian instead of Fiona, how would that have changed things? I really love the arc of this novel—it’s divided up by month, from June to September, and the short time period paired with Emily’s extreme growth make for really dynamic story-telling and character-building.

The characters are really strong. Emily’s transformation is not only believable, but feels almost inevitable. Fiona is an amazing vivisection of the line between identity and the cultivation of taste because of how it reflects on her. The biggest treat for me, though, were the descriptions of clothes, hair, and art of which Same Difference is chock-full.

“Robyn has on gray leggings, a blousy yellow tank top that could almost be a dress, and a pair of saddle shoes. Fiona wears a pair of skinny frayed jean shorts cut at the knees, a cropped navy vest buttoned tight around her chest, and these vampy open-toe red heels. I think the vest might have come from a little boy’s Catholic school uniform or something—it fits her like a corset. A tangle of long, thin gold chains hangs from her neck. It’s the kind of outfit that belongs in a magazine, the sort of thing that you can’t imagine anyone would wear in real life. But there she is, in real life, wearing it” (58-9).

My So-Called LifeThere is a class trip to a museum, and I simply cannot read or watch anything involving a class trip to a museum without invoking the episode of My So-Called Life (“Why Jordan Can’t Read”) when Angela’s class goes to the museum and Angela loses the note she’s written describing the pathos of her love for Jordan and he finds it . . . In fact, I feel like a lot of the things that I enjoy about Same Difference Tessa discussed in her review of Blake Nelson’s Girl on Monday, including it’s association with My So-Called Life. (Who am I kidding? I could find some connection between every book I read and My So-Called Life.)

personal disclosure

I moved to Philadelphia in September and began teaching at an art college very like the one where Emily attends her summer program, so I’ve been thinking about this book a lot recently, and about reinventing yourself, so it was a particular delight to re-read Same Difference.

readalikes

Hey, Dollface Deborah Hautzing

Hey, Dollface by Deborah Hautzig (1978). Val and Chloe are the odd ones out at their Manhattan prep school. Together they pick through thrift stores, hang out in cemeteries, and generally have better taste than everyone. As Val’s feelings for Chloe deepen into romance, she realizes that adults don’t always have all the answers.

The Truth About Forever Sarah Dessen

The Truth About Forever by Sarah Dessen (2004). Over the course of the summer, Macy, who is doing everything she can to impress her studious and controlled boyfriend, falls in with a ragged band of caterers and finds herself taking risks to be with Wes, an artist who believes in telling the truth, especially when it’s unpleasant.

procured from: bought, on Tessa’s recommendation when I was off to a summer program of my own.

So, come back on Friday for our interview with the wonderful Siobhan Vivian—and bring your best high school stories, be they wonderful or humiliating. I’m sure for some of you these triumphs and tribulations are still fresh; the rest of you can take the time between now and Friday to clear away the cobwebs, have a drink, and dredge up the dirt necessary to win a copy of Siobhan’s The List.

Re-read: Girl by Blake Nelson

Girl: A Novel
Blake Nelson
Touchstone/Simon & Schuster, 1994

Things that I remembered about Girl before re-reading:
- a feeling of how monumentally great it was
- an image of a drawing of a hallway with red lockers (maybe the illustration from when an excerpt was published in Sassy?)
-shaved heads
-being alone at a show
-finding clothes to wear that made you feel right
-feeling weird about wearing those clothes at school
-an image of standing outside of someone’s house who you really like but aren’t sure of your relationship, and not knowing if they’re in there or if you even want to try to knock on the door

Things that were in the book that I didn’t remember:
-death
-sex
-suicide
-german tourists
-frozen yogurt at Scamp’s and Taco Time
-college applications
-drugs
-working on the high school newspaper
-the importance of wearing one’s hair up
-the sadness of how someone’s grandpa takes all day to walk around the block

Why are you re-reading this novel anyway? What’s it all about?

If you were a teenager in the 90s the YA section of the library (if there was one) was not filled with books about your youth culture.  There were books about youths, sure, and good classic books like The Outsiders.  But nothing about the bands you liked or the scene you wanted to be a part of (I’m assuming you are me in this hypothetical situation).

For that kind of news, you would read Sassy magazine.  Where they sometimes published fiction.  Which is where you learned about Weetzie Bat. And where you first read a story about a girl named Andrea Marr, who was starting her sophomore year at Hillside High School in Portland Oregon.  Her sort of weird loner friend Cybil, who everyone knew as a soccer jock, met a boy downtown named Todd Sparrow, and he impressed her so much she had to do something, so she shaved her head.  Because of Cybil’s hair statement, a boy in school suggests they start a band.  And so Andrea, through Cybil, gains access to a scene.

don't ask me how many times I've watched Empire Records. Enough to only picture Cybil as Deb. photo by Jimmy J. Aquino, click through for live tweeting of that classic film.

Girl follows Andrea up until her graduation and in and out of friendships, through short paragraphs of first-person narration that aren’t exactly journal entries, more like someone talking to themselves in their head.  Andrea loses her virginity, finds the best vintage stores where she buys what her mom calls her “granny clothes”, is sent to work as maintenance crew for a summer camp because of her new interest in said clothes and going to shows at the Outer Limits, starts applying herself to school and getting into college as a way to avoid that fate for another summer, finally meets Todd Sparrow, and sees herself turning into the kind of girl she used to look up to in awe when she was a couple years younger–I mean, she literally sees that look on the faces of people around her:

“Carla turned to me and said ‘I dont’ know if you know this but when Todd goes to Seattle he stays with a girl named Tori and if you want to call her and find out if he’s out of jail, I’ll give you her number.’ I said okay and I took the number and sat back and we all watched Rebecca dance. And all these boys kept coming up to us and it was annoying and Carla wanted to go outside . So me and Cybil went with her and it was a lot better outside because everyone leaned on cars and sat on the curb just like at Outer Limits. And I asked Carla what Tori was like and how old was she and Carla said she was pretty weird and she was twenty-five and she was manic-depressive.  And all the time we were talking guys were staring at us and girls too and I remembered Outer Limits and how Carla was always the coolest girl and whatever people were with her were always the coolest people.” (161)

Andrea was the perfect mixture of naive and cool for a slightly younger teen stuck in the suburbs on which to project her own longings, hopes, and fears. It doesn’t hurt that she’s never really described, looks-wise, so the reader can fully identify herself as Andrea.

new cover...

Does this novel hold up after a reread?

It more than holds up.  As evidenced by my lists above, I retained strong sensory impressions of the feelings Girl left with me but not much else.  It was intense reading it as a teenager but just as enjoyable reading as an adult – I got the rush of remembering my original love of the book and an added layer of looking back at how the characters and their actions come across as an adult.

For example, Andrea’s relationship with Todd Sparrow is obviously exhilarating and new but also sad and emotionally trying–they have great conversations about death, but she also has to ration her time with him through a complex system of symbols in her planner so that she doesn’t ask for too much of him. I could appreciate the intensity of her feelings while also seeing how Nelson slips in details of Todd Sparrow that make me pity him as an adult – he never has money, he’s always making Andrea pay for things, and he’s a 22 year old who is using Andrea as a 16 year old girl-on-the-side. You can see that his life experiences have wounded him so he’s not really emotionally mature or available.

The great thing is that you can tell that Andrea kind of knows this, too, but not in an acknowledged way.  She’s still totally in love and lust with him, and her reservations take the form of trying to figure out how not to look like a groupie and not seem too whiny around Todd–saving face for herself because she knows it’s not a real relationship, but also loving the intense feelings she has with him.  In fact, I’d say the skeeviest dude in the book is not Todd, but Scott Haskell, who takes advantage of Andrea while she’s passed out to use her as real-life jerking off material.

photo by flickr user Dougtone

It’s the voice that Nelson creates for Andrea that makes this novel work and will make it last years down the line.  Unlike many young adult novels using diary-style narration, Andrea doesn’t address the reader and Nelson doesn’t use a device to explain why she’s narrating her experience.  Her voice stands alone, confident and direct. It doesn’t have to explain itself, it just sucks you in.

There’s something about the teenage experience where you worry simultaneously about the big things and the little things, and you feel like you’re just on the cusp of figuring everything out–because finally you have some freedom to make something happen with the emotions that you feel.  Everything is important and receives the same weight of thought, whether it’s if you shop at the same store for all of your clothes, or if some guy breaks your friend’s eardrum at the school lunch table.

Here’s an example of Andrea’s voice, combining all the big and little things in her life in a moment that is both important and forgettable the next day:

“After that we drove around and parked and made out. Then we talked and Mark said how he thought Cybil was okay and how he defended her to his friends when she shaved her head. And he thought the Outer Limits scene was all right in some ways. He was leading up to asking me for sex but I changed the subject to clothes. I complained that my Gap skirt was too boring but he said I looked really cute in it and how I was the cutest girl at the show. And then he told me how sexy I was and how I had a great body. And then let down the seat and got on top of me and we made out more intense than ever. And it was so strange because he was Mark Pierce, senior, with a car, and very cute, who millions of girls liked. And I felt like I should like him more and I tried to but it was hard in the dark when he was just this big weight grinding into you.” (22)

Another great thing about the story is how it captures the microcosm of high school. It does focus on Andrea and her friendship with Cybil, but it also follows the various transformations of several other characters – Greg, Richard, Darcy, Rebecca, Marjorie, and Betsy Warren to name a few, as well as the mysterious outside-of-high-school figures like Todd Sparrow, Carla who is always the coolest girl in the room, Nick from Pax, and Eric the owner of K Club.  Because Andrea narrates the book like she’s talking to herself, it comes off as natural to know about these people–shown passing in and out of Andrea’s awareness.  In this way the world of Girl is unmistakeably the real world and never loses its authenticity.

It’s also not just a story about a romance. Andrea has her one big love, but the focus of the story is really on her and Cybil and the intersection and contrast between their two ways of becoming.  Andrea is narrating, so we see it all from her perspective, but Nelson puts enough in there for us to see the ways that Cybil is lost that Andrea can’t objectively see.

So, if I liked My So-Called Life…
you will definitely like Girl. Andrea is Angela’s gritter West-Coast counterpart.

Where can I read more about the eternally cute Blake Nelson?

Blake Nelson just wrote a sequel to Girl called Dream School (that I have and am excited and scared to read), so there’s been a happymaking amount of coverage of him lately around the blogs. Here’s a few links:

Blake’s blogspot
Interview at Rookie Mag:
“I got a lot of it wrong, I realized as I got older. But one thing I’ve noticed is that people are insecure about sex, so if a female character says: ‘Whenever I kiss a boy, my ears tingle,’ the female reader thinks: ‘Oh no! Why don’t my ears tingle?’ instead of thinking: ‘That doesn’t really happen! This is a guy writing this, not a girl!’ Also, I think in some cases, if you have a good story going, people will go with it.”
Interview at the Hairpin:
“GIRL was originally an adult book. I wrote it basically for Kim Gordon [of Sonic Youth] for some reason. And for my friends who had been through the ’80s punk scene of when I was in high school. The tone of it was originally ‘look how stupid we all were.’ And how adorably confused. But then about halfway through, I realized that the kids of that time (the Sassy ’90s) were going to be the real audience. “
Profile at The Millions
Interview at Teenage Film

This guy knows how to write.

Should I read his other books?

Yes! Especially Destroy All Cars. I’m constantly trying to get people to read that one. It’s a funny book that has boy appeal.

Is there anything else you want to say, Tessa?

Yes, I’m wondering if the model on the cover of the original paperback, credited as Michelle Madonna, is the same Michelle Madonna who is on a reality TV show called Queen Bees. Does anyone know?

Also, Blake Nelson, your poem “Never Change” was up on my wall for a long, long time. Thank you for writing that.

I got this book from:my own personal bookshelf.

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