Reader Score
73%
73% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 12 reviews on
A National Book Critics Circle Leonard Prize Finalist
Longlisted for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize
Named a Best Book of the Year by Vogue, BuzzFeed, The Washington Post, Esquire, Harper's Bazaar, NPR, NYLON, Huffington Post, Kirkus Reviews, Barnes & Noble
Chosen for the Book of the Month Club, Nylon Book Club, and Belletrist Book Club
Named an Indie Next Pick and a Barnes and Noble Discover Pick
At the center of Julie Buntin's debut novel is the kind of coming-of-age friendship that goes beyond camaraderie, into a deeper bond that forges identity; it's friendship as a creative act, a collaborative work of imagination. . .This generous, sensitive novel of true feeling. . . sweeps you up without too much explication, becoming both a painful exorcism and a devoted memorial to friends and selves who are gone. -The New York Times Book Review
Excellent....a wild, gorgeous evocation...[Buntin's] lyricism is precise and revelatory, capable of great beauty and, when called for, great ugliness. Marlena is a novel about youth--a time of splendor and squalor. Buntin make us see, hear and feel both. -The San Francisco Chronicle A vivid portrait of a friendship between two teen girls in a troubled community that captures the heartaches of adolescence...At every turn, Buntin's prose flows with the easy, confident rhythms of an accomplished writer, and though there's really no mystery in the narrative, it reads nearly as compulsively as a thriller...The tale of two friends, one who succeeds and one who fails, isn't new--it's the entire focus of Elena Ferrante's wildly popular Neapolitan books. But it remains fascinating nonetheless, especially in Buntin's capable hands. -The Boston Globe Julie Buntin's standout debut novel, Marlena. . . cannily interweaves two different time frames to capture an electric friendship and its legacy. . . .Buntin is attuned to the way in which adolescent friends embolden and betray. . . .Cat is a keen observer of all the markers of upward mobility: in this case, a New York life complete with a literary job and a kind, stable husband who makes dinner. The novel's most impressive passages concern the watermark that remains, visible in the light of too many after-work martinis, and in attempts at adult friendships.-Vogue, Girls on the Verge It's still so early in 2017 that calling something a best debut novel of the year is a dicey thing to try and do. But if the Lorrie Moore blurb on the front cover doesn't tip you off that Julie Buntin's Marlena is a book you should be paying attention to, the fact that the author created something that could easily be called the millennial Midwestern version of the celebrated Elena Ferrante Neapolitan Novels crossed with Robin Wasserman's great Girls on Fire, should do the trick.-Rolling Stone