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I'll Take You There: A Novel
 
 

I'll Take You There: A Novel (Paperback)

by Joyce C Oates (Author) "In those days in the early Sixties we were not women yet but girls ..." (more)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
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In her bewitching 30th novel, I'll Take You There, Joyce Carol Oates returns again to neurotic female post-adolescence. The unnamed narrator attends an upstate New York university in the early 1960s. In those times of tightly prescribed femininity, she joins a sorority in a bald attempt to become part of the sisterhood of normalcy. It doesn't work. She reads philosophy, she works for a living, she's asexual, she's an orphan, she's a Jew: "I was a freak in the midst of their stunning, stampeding, blazing female normality." Booted from the sorority, she falls hard for a thirtyish black philosophy student who seems to her to live on a higher plane than the rest of humanity. In the final section, she is called west to the deathbed of someone she thought was lost to her forever. Oates brings together some of her strongest trademark qualities: She writes her character's life as though it were a fairy tale. She sells her material, bringing dramatic tension to the very first page: "They would claim I destroyed Mrs. Thayer.... Yet others would claim that Mrs. Thayer destroyed me." And she writes with tender care about the intellectual life of her young protagonist. Some find Oates's obsession with nascent womanhood claustrophobic, but in this heroine she finds a vein of integrity and intellectual probity peculiar to those who are not quite adult. Most writers treat college life as comedy or romance. Oates, on the other hand, seriously explores an age when we are most terribly ourselves. She seems to find something deeply human and pleasingly dramatic in this time wedged between childhood and adulthood. --Claire Dederer --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


From Publishers Weekly

Most of us transcend the solipsism of loneliness by involvement in family, school or work. "Anellia," the narrator of Oates's 30th novel (who never reveals her real name), is denied the comfort of a family, finds education to be a frustrating journey through various hostile worlds and finally becomes that most solitary of creatures, a writer. The time is the early '60s. Anellia is the last child of Ida and Eric. After Ida's death (for which Anellia is blamed by her three brothers), Eric leaves his daughter to be raised by his cold German Lutheran parents in the upstate New York town of Strykersville. Anellia wins a scholarship to Syracuse University around 1960. She becomes for a period a Kappa Gamma Pi. The conventionally girlish Kappas are a decidedly different breed from Anellia: she is intellectual, shy, careless of her looks and hygiene, poor. Eventually the Kappas and Anellia come to a violent parting of the ways. Next, Anellia has a depressingly anhedonic affair with a black philosophy graduate student, Vernor Matheius. Vernor is trying to hold himself aloof from the civil rights struggle making the evening news, yet necessarily becomes drawn in. In the final section, Anellia, living in Vermont and working on her first book, goes to Utah to be with her father on his deathbed. Oates's fans will be pleased by the usual care with which she goes about constructing the psychology of Anellia and Vernor, but may find Anellia too narrow and stifling a spirit, limiting the larger gestures and bravura flashes of gothicism at which Oates excels.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

20 Reviews
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 (12)
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 (2)
3 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Good, but not the best, Jun 30 2004
By A Customer
I'll admit, that when I first read this book, the first of Oates that I read, I was immediately drawn into the main character, and her neurotic world. After reading a few more of Oates' novels, I can see why it is not one of her major works. Therefore, I give this novel 5 stars for believable and interesting characterization, but 3 stars for accessibility and plot relevance, averaging 4 stars. Although this is good, I would recommend reading, "Foxfire," also by Oates, instead.
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5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best books I have ever read!, Dec 30 2003
This is the first book I have read of Joyce Carol Oates. Now, I want to read all of her books. Her language is so... beautiful. If you are a reader that likes "deep" books, you should definitely read this one.

The story takes place in a University in upstate New York during the 60s. The narrator of the book is an 18-year-old girl, whose real name you never know through out the book, though she likes to call herself "Anellia" sometimes . There's three parts to the book. The first part is when she joins a sorority, full of rich, popular, pretty girls. But "Anellia" is poor and geeky, who looks like a 13-year-old even though she is 18. The second part of the book is when she falls in love with a black philosophy student, who is hesitant at first to let "Anellia", who is white, know and love him. The third part of the book, which I think is the best part of the book, is when she discovers that someone who she thought was dead is not.

I loved this book. I think Joyce Carol Oates is gonna be my second favorite author.{John O'hara is my 1st.} It is great for adults, and teenagers who like adult books.{I am a teenager} It is the kind of book that you'll think about for a while after you finish reading it. But if you are a person who likes "trashy" books with lots of sex scenes and stuff, look somewhere else.

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1.0 out of 5 stars terrible book from a terrible author, Nov 19 2003
By A Customer
simply awful. why would anyone read Oates? it's like she can't stop herself from spewing out garbage like this. for the love of god, Joyce, step away from the keyboard.
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Most recent customer reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars One of the worst books..
I have read in a long time. Maybe I just don't get it but this book I couldn't get into. Too many quotes and philosophy. I destested the main character the WHOLE time. Read more
Published on Nov 4 2003 by Tonya Speelman

5.0 out of 5 stars Joyce Carol Oates At The Top Of Her Form
Without question "I'll Take You There" is among Joyce Carol Oates's finest novels. Here she returns to familiar autobiographical grounds, examining the college life and... Read more
Published on Jul 31 2003 by John Kwok

3.0 out of 5 stars Not her best
I've read maybe eight or so Joyce Carol Oates novels - but because she's almost scarily prolific, I've still barely made a dent in her oeuvre (where does she find the time to... Read more
Published on Jun 23 2003 by me-jane

4.0 out of 5 stars STRANGE, YET CAPTIVATING
I'LL TAKE YOU THERE was my first exposure to Joyce Carol Oates so I had no idea what to expect when I initially opened the front cover. Read more
Published on May 29 2003 by S. Calhoun

5.0 out of 5 stars Taking Us There
This is a most powerful novel about the angst and turmoil of the embroiled sixties and its fast-fading mores. Read more
Published on May 18 2003 by Carrol Wolverton

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Oates
As I've said after reading one of her other books, it is a real travesty that Joyce Carol Oates, our most prolific serious contemporary author, has yet to be awarded a Nobel Prize... Read more
Published on April 14 2003 by Hugh Pearson

5.0 out of 5 stars Pure Oates
This book is 100% pure Joyce Carol Oates. It features the Oatesian neurotic female lead who seems to flit aimlessly through life, finding trouble along the way due to her own... Read more
Published on Feb 26 2003 by Bryce Warren

5.0 out of 5 stars Of Love and Truth
This is a book about love: The narrator tells us about her attempts to belong. She wants to belong to the sorority, be one of those smooth, lovable girls - but all too soon she... Read more
Published on Feb 15 2003 by Manuel Haas

5.0 out of 5 stars I'll Follow You There!
In Joyce Carol Oates' book, she returns to a very familiar setting. In 1963, a college campus in Syracuse, N.Y. Read more
Published on Feb 13 2003 by Jon Linden

5.0 out of 5 stars Oates is Fabulous, Again
I have to start off this review by admitting that I love Joyce Carol Oates. There is something wonderful, entrancing about the rhythm of her prose that is again present in I'll... Read more
Published on Jan 9 2003 by Elizabeth Hendry

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