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Title:Pages for You (Pages for You #1)
Author:Sylvia Brownrigg
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 274 pages
Published:April 6th 2002 by Picador (first published April 18th 2001)
Categories:LGBT. Fiction. Romance. GLBT. Lesbian. Queer
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Pages for You (Pages for You #1) Paperback | Pages: 274 pages
Rating: 3.93 | 8078 Users | 352 Reviews

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In a steam-filled diner in a college town, Flannery Jansen catches sight of something more beautiful than she's ever seen: a graduate student, reading. The seventeen-year-old, new to everything around her—college, the East Coast, bodies of literature, and the sexual flurries of student life—is shocked by her desire to follow this wherever it will take her. When Flannery finds herself enrolled in a class with the remote, brilliant older woman, she is intimidated at first, but gradually becomes Anne Arden's student—Baudelaire, lipstick colors, or how to travel with a lover—Flannery proves an eager pupil, until one day learns more about Anne than she ever wanted to know.

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Original Title: Pages for You
ISBN: 0312420048 (ISBN13: 9780312420048)
Edition Language: English
Series: Pages for You #1
Literary Awards: Lambda Literary Award (2001)

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Ratings: 3.93 From 8078 Users | 352 Reviews

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The writing is eloquent and lyrical but god this book was depressing. Not sure if it was the best thing for me to read right now. So it's gorgeous but be forewarned. You may want to stab yourself in the face after reading.

Very good style of writing. The ending ruined it all. The end.

I wish I'd read this ten years agonot because I think I particularly needed it ten years ago, but because there are ten years between Anne and Flannery, and I wonder whether I might have taken the book differently if I'd read it when I was at Flannery's age (seventeen, then eighteen) rather than Anne's (twenty-eight, as I am now).I wish, too, that I hadn't read any reviews immediately before starting the book, because I also wonder whether I might have taken things differently had I not had an

Flannery, a 17 year old college student, falls in love with Anne a lecturer at her university. Split into three sections this novel shows the longing, the affair, and the affair's decline. Sometimes overwritten, I was interested in these two characters, but it was just too much of the same: literature, lust, love. It became a very claustrophobic read, and not in a way that made me think that was clever - just a little irritating.

Sometimes I really want to write poetry, but I can't because I don't know anything about poetry. And then I think, "Maybe I should just write it as prose. You know, just not break it up into little short lines." As I was reading Pages for You it occurred to me that Sylvia Brownrigg had done something similar with this novel. The chapters are quite short, usually only about a page and a half; each chapter clearly has its own theme, and they make liberal use of metaphor, description, and idiom,

I never felt fully immersed or deeply moved by this book, and I think I can pinpoint exactly why: the third-person narration kept me at a distance the whole time. How I wish I could have been deeper inside 17-year-old Flannery's head as she experienced first love with the poised and sophisticated Anne. Third-person narration just seemed like such a strange choice for this topic, and the intensity it was going for.I didn't find myself savoring it, nor aching to read more. I knew going into it

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