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13
by Mary Lou Zeitoun
The Porcupine’s Quill, 2002
Reviewed by Aidan Baker
I really wanted to dislike this book. On the front cover is a teenage girl
in a Catholic school uniform with a cigarette dangling from her lip. The
copy on the back cover reads, "It’s 1980 and Marnie Harmon dreams of John
Lennon. Surrounded by disco, pervs and polyester she discovers punk on her
forced march into womanhood." Beneath this is the author photograph - a
late-30something, relatively matronly looking woman...punk as a descriptive
word doesn’t particularly come to mind at all. I think, judging this book by
its covers, that if one is looking for a prime example of sub-cultural
appropriation, this has got to be it.
Yes and no. I’m not necessarily a proponent of the writing maxim ‘write what
you know’ but it would seem Zeitoun wasn’t a punk. 13 isn’t really about
punk at all. Marnie doesn’t start hanging out with punks until nearly the
end of the book and she mentions The Beatles and Pink Floyd many more times
than the Sex Pistols or The Dead Kennedys (one mention each). When Marnie
does comment on the punk scene/lifestyle, it’s with this relatively obvious
observation: "[T]he other punk girls all squealed and hugged each other when
they met. Wow. I had never even seen people hugging each other when they
met. Even boys. I thought punks were supposed to be mean" (p106). It’s
difficult to label this appropriation when so little has been appropriated
in the first place. Maybe I should blame the publisher for being
sensationalistic and playing up the punk aspect to boost sales.
It is safe to presume that Zeitoun was once a thirteen year old girl, so in
that regard her character Marnie seems to be a fairly authentic (if
occasionally a touch too self-aware) teenage girl. Growing up in a desolate
suburb of Ottawa, she hates her school and the popular kids, who just want
to get high and/or make-out, she hates her parents, who want her to be safe
and/or normal, she hates a lot of things. In fact she lists off the things
she hates on the very first page: "I hated everything. I hated the suburb of
Green Vista. I hated Ottawa. I hated my street. I hated my mother. I hated
my ugly, white brick school" (p8), etc. etc. When she’s not detailing her
various hatreds, Marnie fantasizes about escaping to New York, meeting John
Lennon, and doing something, anything meaningful with her life.
I can’t say I really disliked 13, since it was a relatively entertaining
read. Unfortunately, there are a lot of little things to nit-pick. The
notion that the book is about punk, for one. The narrative neatness of the
ending, for another, everything cheerfully and effortlessly tied up, was
rather contrived. And, of course, there’s the problem that an authentic
teenage girl doesn’t necessarily make for an interesting character. A lot of
thirteen year olds are rather annoying and whiny - take above list of hated
things, for example - and 13 does get overblown with teenagery angst at
times. Zeitoun’s simple and straight-forward language, with the occasional
sparks of humour, usually makes up for this. But sometimes Marnie is just
too much and I found myself sympathizing with the adults rather than her: "I
was just learning to hate even bigger" (p95). Oh, please. Grow up.
Aidan
Baker is a Toronto-based writer and musician who has
published internationally in such magazines as Intangible, Stanzas and The
Columbia Review. His poetry was earlier featured in The
Danforth Review.
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