For years, Gina Frangello has been bringing interesting, innovative fiction to readers as the co-editor of Other Voices. Now, her debut novel, My Sister’s Continent, has arrived, and I for one am itching to read it. The Chicago Tribune calls it “a refreshing rebuttal to the canard that feminism is humorless,” while Donna Seaman of Booklist writes, “Frangello is uncanny and mesmerizing in this smart, suspenseful psychosexual drama as she choreographs traumatic and even criminal family dynamics.”
About the book:
A contemporary retelling of Freud’s infamous “Dora” case study, following a loosely parallel plot and containing similarly controverisal sexual themes and layers of possibilities. Kirby is a young woman attempting to come to terms with a failed bout of therapy while concurrently trying to decipher the truth about the life of her identical twin, Kendra. Two years after Kendra’s mysterious disappearance, Kirby has only the journals Kendra left behind by which to examine her sister’s–and her own–past. But when she is sent a skewed case study of herself by her former psychiatrist, she decides to respond by using Kendra’s journals to reconstruct her final months with her sister and her brief time in therapy, finally creating her own version of the truth.
You can read an interview with Gina over at Bookslut.