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"The Tigers of Lents shows a seldom seen side of Portland, Oregon. It's a family saga set mainly in Lents, a working-class outer neighborhood not found in hip magazines or TV shows. Sara is the eldest teenage daughter, a fiery soccer star scared to take the way out offered by her talent. Next is Elaine, shy and obese, who might have the grandest dreams of them all and takes an after-school job at Chuck E. Cheese's. The youngest sister, Rachel, is a reader and poet whose imagination stalls at trying to picture a better life. The girls' hard-edged mother, Melanie, works full-time as a grocery…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"The Tigers of Lents shows a seldom seen side of Portland, Oregon. It's a family saga set mainly in Lents, a working-class outer neighborhood not found in hip magazines or TV shows. Sara is the eldest teenage daughter, a fiery soccer star scared to take the way out offered by her talent. Next is Elaine, shy and obese, who might have the grandest dreams of them all and takes an after-school job at Chuck E. Cheese's. The youngest sister, Rachel, is a reader and poet whose imagination stalls at trying to picture a better life. The girls' hard-edged mother, Melanie, works full-time as a grocery store cashier and is divorced from the girls' father, Keith, who returns to Lents and tries to rebuild his relationship with his wary daughters after serving a six-year prison term for burglary. Even as the Garrisons struggle to communicate with each other and battle with self-doubts in their quest for better lives, they draw on a fierce shared strength - an innate self-reliance that allows them to push back at the reality that's been handed to them. The Tigers of Lents depicts a part of American life not often well-understood and connects with elements of Matthew Desmond's Evicted and Barbara Ehrenreich's Nickel and Dimed. It shows how three sisters living in poverty struggle to hold onto their dignity, often through daily acts of grace and good humor, to say nothing of quiet grit"--
Autorenporträt
Mark Pomeroy leads creative writing workshops in Portland Public Schools. He is author of The Brightwood Stillness, and a recipient of an Oregon Literary Fellowship for Fiction. He lives in Portland.