Just Call Me Superhero
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
The acclaimed author of Broken Glass Park brings her “warmth, humor and sharp observational eye” to a disfigured teenager’s coming of age in Berlin (Kirkus Reviews).
Once a handsome teenager, seventeen-year-old Marek is left badly disfigured after a Rottweiler attack. Now his mother sends him to a support group for young people with physical disabilities—what he calls “the cripple group”—led by an eccentric older man only known as “the guru”. Angry at the world and dismissive of the group, Marek sees no connection between their misfortunes and his own. Then a family crisis forces Marek to face his demons, and he finds himself in dire need of support. But the distance he has put between himself and the guru’s misshapen acolytes may well be too great to bridge.
Just Call Me Superhero cements Alina Bronsky’s reputation as one of Germany’s most compelling and stylish young authors. An atmospheric evocation of modern Berlin, a vivid portrait of youth under pressure, and a moving story about learning to love, this new novel from the author of Broken Glass Park and Hottest Dishes of the Tartar Cuisine is an irreverent look at the sometimes-difficult work of self-acceptance.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The latest novel from Bronsky (The Hottest Dishes of the Tartar Cuisine) sets out to be a "cruel comic romp," filled with caustic, eccentric folk and ending in a kind of redemption. The main character, a 17-year-old boy named Marek maimed and disfigured after an attack by a Rottweiler, is as corrosive as acid. One day Marek's cold mother, Claudia, tricks him into going to a support group "for cripples." The others in the group, one blind, another in a wheelchair, all afflicted in some way but distinguishable on the page only by their disabilities, come together under the direction of "the guru" who decides to make a film about them. Marek falls for the beautiful Janne, who is in a wheelchair, and is also being pursued by the blind Marlon. The novel takes an abrupt turn when Marek's father dies, and Marek must leave the group to attend the funeral. He meets his young step-brother, whose mother was Marek's au pair and for whom Marek's father left Claudia. The two story lines have little in common, and the resolution at the end of the book is not at all believable, having to do with the identities of the guru and each of the young people in the group. Bronsky's novel strives for absurdist humor but falls short.