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So Far Away

A Novel

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
Thirteen-year-old Natalie Gallagher is trying to escape: from her parents' ugly divorce, and from the vicious cyber-bullying of her former best friend. Adrift, confused, she is a girl trying to find her way in a world that seems to either neglect or despise her. Her salvation arrives in an unlikely form: Bridget O'Connell, an Irish maid working for a wealthy Boston family. The catch? Bridget lives only in the pages of a dusty old 1920s diary Natalie unearthed in her mother's basement. But the life she describes is as troubling — and mysterious — as the one Natalie is trying to navigate herself, almost a century later.
I am writing this down because this is my story. There were only ever two people who knew my secret, and both are gone before me.
Who was Bridget, and what became of her?
Natalie escapes into the diary, eager to unlock its secrets, and reluctantly accepts the help of library archivist Kathleen Lynch, a widow with her own painful secret: she's estranged from her only daughter. Kathleen sees in Natalie traces of the daughter she has lost, and in Bridget, another spirited young woman at risk.
What could an Irish immigrant domestic servant from the 1920s teach them both? As the troubles of a very modern world close in around them, and Natalie's torments at school escalate, the faded pages of Bridget's journal unite the lonely girl and the unhappy widow . . . and might even change their lives forever.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 9, 2012
      “Solace,” the characters in Moore’s touching second novel (after The Arrivals) find, “can come from unlikely sources.” Widow Kathleen Lynch is lonely and heartbroken, unable to stop ruminating on her missing daughter, who ran away as a teenager. Working at the Massachusetts Archives, Kathleen meets Natalie Gallagher, an awkward, sad 13-year-old. The girl’s parents are separated, her father distant, her mother depressed and emotionally absent, leaving her alone to fend off two relentless cyberbullies, one of whom was her former best friend. Natalie and Kathleen are brought together by Natalie’s research into family history for a school project and the discovery of an old family diary; written in the 1970s, it details the life of an Irish woman in American since 1925 and builds to a gripping secret. Natalie and Kathleen, two people in need, reach out to each other, but it takes lessons learned from the past to help them move forward. This sweet and thoughtful novel is both tense and elegiac, exploring the damage we inflict on ourselves and each other, and the strength it takes to heal. Agent: Elizabeth Weed, Weed Literary.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      When student Natalie asks research librarian Kathleen for help with a school project, the two form an uneasy alliance, each recognizing that the other is troubled. After Kathleen discovers the girl is being cyber-bullied, she wonders if and how she can help. Suzanne Toren narrates the chapters told from Kathleen's point of view, adding an ache to her voice and giving listeners a sense of how the woman's losses have colored her everyday existence. At the same time, Toren is careful to maintain Kathleen's pragmatic outlook and disdain for self-pity. Natalie's chapters are narrated by Emma Galvin, whose youthful voice reflects a range of teenage moods. Her reading is particularly sensitive as Natalie grows more despondent over her personal problems and feels there's nowhere to turn. C.B.L. © AudioFile 2012, Portland, Maine
    • Library Journal

      May 15, 2012

      Bright 13-year-old Natalie Gallagher is struggling to survive. Her mother is nearly catatonic from a difficult divorce. Her mostly absent dad and his girlfriend are expecting a baby. Natalie's former best friend has joined forces with a sociopathic Popular Girl whose cyberbullying of Natalie escalates at frightening speed. To escape, Natalie heads to the Massachusetts Archives with an old diary she found in her attic, hoping for help in deciphering the tragic tale of Bridget, a beleaguered Boston maid. Widowed archivist Kathleen Lynch sees in Natalie an opportunity to save another "girl in trouble," having lost her own daughter years earlier to drugs and bad friends and the streets. Natalie and Kathleen form a fragile bond that very well may be salvation for both of them--or their undoing. VERDICT Moore's second novel (after The Arrivals) takes readers on a stomach-clenching journey with two good people in terrible pain. She underlies her fresh, gripping look at a long-standing social problem with a backstory that will take less observant readers by surprise. [See Prepub Alert, 11/7/11.]--Beth E. Andersen, Ann Arbor Dist. Lib., MI

      Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2011

      Suffering through cyberbullying and her parents' nasty divorce, 13-year-old Natalie Gallagher discovers an old diary in the basement and shares it with an archivist at the Massachusetts State Archives. Moore did nicely with her debut, The Arrivals, so keep an eye on this one.

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2012
      After a mild-mannered family-dramedy debut (The Arrivals, 2011), Moore gets way more intense in a novel that mingles the stories of a cyberbullied high school student, a guilt-ridden archivist and an Irish maid in the 1920s. It's unusual for a 13-year-old to be poking around the Massachusetts Archives, especially since she's come to Boston on the bus all the way from Newburyport. But what really attracts Kathleen Lynch's attention to Natalie Gallagher is that the girl reminds Kathleen of her own daughter Susannah, who got involved in drugs and vanished just before graduating from high school some 10 years ago. Natalie's under pressure too; Kathleen sees a vaguely threatening text on the girl's dropped cell phone, and we quickly learn that Natalie is being bullied by her former BFF Hannah Morgan and Hannah's new pal, the extremely nasty Taylor Grant. Natalie's mother, who's gone practically catatonic since her husband moved out, is in no shape to protect her daughter, and Kathleen's well-meaning attempts to help backfire. A second plot unfolds in the notebook Natalie found in the basement of her family's house and brought to the Archives; it details Bridget O'Connell's experiences in 1925-1926 as a maid to Newburyport's Turner family. Moore's storytelling skills are evident as the tension builds on both fronts. Bridget suffers demeaning treatment from Mrs. Turner and winds up in bed with Dr. Turner, with disastrous consequences. Taylor's persecution escalates, and Natalie feels increasingly isolated as her mother buries herself in work, her father takes a vacation with his new girlfriend, and Kathleen is distracted by a friend whose lover is caught in the Haitian earthquake. Moore is equally skillful in capturing the class tensions of the early 20th century and the scary cruelty of teenage girls amplified by 21st-century technology. The final pages dangle a plethora of loose ends, but they're unlikely to bother readers gripped by the novel's strong emotional content.

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from April 15, 2012
      In her second novel, after The Arrivals (2011), Moore wields a powerfully emotive style, not unlike that of Francine Prose, in which she displays both deep compassion and winning humor. Miserable 13-year-old Natalie Gallagher and lonely archivist Kathleen Lynch make a life-changing connection at the Massachusetts State Archives when Natalie brings in an old journal for a school project. It is the diary of an Irish servant from the 1920s rendered in indecipherable handwriting. Kathleen is immediately struck by Natalie's vulnerability, which achingly reminds her of her own daughter, who ran away from home when she was 17. As the two labor to transcribe the diary, Kathleen discovers that high-school freshman Natalie is dealing with her parents' divorce while also trying to fend off the cyberbullying of two classmates, one of whom used to be her best friend. Kathleen is not about to let this chance at redemption pass her by, for she is still eaten up by guilt over her failure to recognize that her own daughter was heavily into drugs. Moore relays not only their affecting relationship but also the compelling story of the diarist, who was badly used by her wealthy employer. A beautifully told story of human fallibility and connection.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

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