Saturday, March 30, 2013

The Art of Forgetting by Camille Noe Pagan - A Review

Is your best friend perfect? Probably not. Evidently you love her anyway or you would have abandoned the friendship long ago. The Art of Forgetting explores the twists and turns in a friendship that is less than harmonious, yet essential for one’s well-being. Self-deprecating Marissa and self-centered Julia have been friends since they were fourteen. Although they show their love for each other in very different ways, Julia and Marissa need each other to the extent that their friendship becomes an addiction. Both women are flawed, yet they remain bonded. An accident leaves Julia, a dancer, with Traumatic Brain Injury. While she recuperates their solidarity is tested and strengthened in ways neither Julia nor Marissa understands.


The book is aptly titled. New and long-held hurts are best forgotten. Julia punches Marissa with unflinching, hurtful honesty (a side effect of a frontal lobe injury). Both have issues over a man they tangled with in the past. The sheen on their friendship has been tarnished by the past and tested by the accident, but they manage to move past the old issues and form a new bond. Marissa, who suffered from a need to be rescued and buoyed up by her friends, uncovers a positive self-image that can’t be taught. The plot element of coaching an after-school running team comes out of the blue, but is well-utilized in Marissa’s discovery that she is the only one who can help her believe in herself.


Author Camille Noe Pagán regularly publishes features about women’s health in various national publications. The Art of Forgetting marks her debut in fiction. Pagán admits that fiction is a great departure from journalism. After a day of writing articles dealing with hard science, she spent her nights writing her novel. Writing fiction felt to her “like a wonderful escape; I loved sitting down and digging into my characters’ lives.” A specialist in scientific inquiry, the author consulted medical journals, physicians specializing in brain injury and entered chat rooms for first-hand perspectives from people with Traumatic Brain Injury. She provides resources for TBI at the end of the book.


Readers looking for perfect characters to emulate may be disappointed by The Art of Forgetting. The book will appeal to those who have worked hard to earn personal growth and forge strong relationships. The book is a courageous examination of flawed human beings coping with a disturbed equilibrium.


The jacket cover is luminous. Are we looking at a dancer taking her last bow due to her brain injury? Or, perhaps, the image is that of one woman or two attempting to hold themselves together against all odds.


The Penguin Group provided the advance review copy. The opinions expressed in the review are unbiased and wholly those of the reviewer.



The Art of Forgetting by Camille Noe Pagan - A Review

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