A goldfish named Ian is falling from the 27th-floor balcony on which his fishbowl sits. He's longed for adventure, so when the opportunity arises, he escapes from his bowl, clears the balcony railing and finds himself airborne. Plummeting toward the street below, Ian witnesses the lives of the Seville on Roxy residents.
There's the handsome grad student, his girlfriend, and the other woman; the construction worker who feels trapped by a secret; the building's super who feels invisible and alone; the pregnant woman on bed rest who craves a forbidden ice cream sandwich; the shut-in for whom dirty talk, and quiche, are a way of life; and home-schooled Herman, a boy who thinks he can travel through time.
Though they share time and space, they have something even more important in common: each faces a decision that will affect the course of their lives. Within the walls of the Seville are stories of love, new life, and death, of facing the ugly truth of who one has been and the beautiful truth of who one can become.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
July 2, 2024 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781466861701
- File size: 657 KB
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781466861701
- File size: 1216 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
June 29, 2015
Somer’s (Imperfections) confident second novel combines a rare glimpse into the mind of an adventurous goldfish with ambitious musings on the nature of time and space. Set within the confines of a street and an apartment building—the Seville on Roxy—the action begins with Ian the goldfish free-falling toward the sidewalk, not knowing where he’s headed (his mantra is “having a plan is the first step toward failure”). During his descent, he sees flashes of the lives being lived inside the Seville. The narrative deftly switches from Ian’s point of view to that of the residents; each vignette is described several times, from the eyes of the different characters involved. Under scrutiny are the romantic entanglements of Connor Radley, Ian’s owner; the ire of Connor’s girlfriend, Katie; the dilemma of Claire the shut-in receiving a knock at her door from a pregnant Petunia Delilah; and the secret life of Garth, a construction worker with a mysterious package. Enjoyable touches of farce and wry asides abound, underscoring moments of reckoning in eccentric, yet deeply human, dilemmas. -
Kirkus
May 15, 2015
Linked perspectives connect the quirky residents of an apartment building in Somer's second novel (Imperfections, 2012). Though it appears unremarkable from the outside, the Seville on Roxy-a "Multi-Residential, High-Density High-Rise"-is teeming with life. And as a goldfish named Ian plunges from a fishbowl on a 27th-floor balcony toward the pavement, he registers brief glimpses of the lives occurring within, which Somer fleshes into vivid, interwoven strands. There's Katie, a sensitive college student visiting the Seville to find out if her boyfriend loves her; meanwhile, Connor Radley, said boyfriend, clears his apartment of guilty debris (and the woman in his bed). A landlord named Jiminez attempts to fix the building's broken elevator, forcing everyone to take the stairs-including social outcast Herman and Garth, a burly construction worker clutching a secret package. On the eighth floor, the heavily pregnant Petunia Delilah goes into labor alone while, several apartments over, Claire the shut-in loses her job at a phone-sex line. As their perspectives cycle through, the residents' lives collide in unexpected ways. As she climbs the stairs, Katie passes Connor's lover wearing her own nightshirt, forcing her to "stay amid her delusions in the stairwell" or confront her clearly unfaithful boyfriend. Petunia knocks on nearby doors for help, and Garth unwraps the package and changes into his beautiful dress, unaware that an unanticipated visitor may soon discover his secret. As the action in the Seville mounts, confrontations play out, lives hang in the balance, and identities are exposed. Somer has created well-developed characters and effectively transports the reader into their three-dimensional worlds; there are also genuinely touching moments, as when Claire and Herman attempt to deliver Petunia's baby with the help of an emergency response worker. Somer stitches things together a bit too neatly, however. From Ian's eventual salvation to Claire's link to the emergency response worker, these coincidences detract from the story's believability; nonetheless, the plot's center of human kindness mostly makes up the difference. Touching and well-written.COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
subjects
Languages
- English
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