Ten miles past normal

cover image

Where to find it

North Carolina Collection (Wilson Library)

Call Number
C813 D746t
Status
In-Library Use Only
Item Note
Dustjacket.
Call Number
C813 D746t c. 2
Status
Available

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

Janie Gorman wants to be normal. The problem with that: she's not. She's smart and creative and a little bit funky. She's also an unwilling player in her parents' modern-hippy, let's-live-on-a-goat-farm experiment (regretfully, instigated by a younger, much more enthusiastic Janie). This, to put it simply, is not helping Janie reach that "normal target." She has to milk goats every day...and endure her mother's pseudo celebrity in the homemade-life, crunchy mom blogosphere. Goodbye the days of frozen lasagna and suburban living, hello crazy long bus ride to high school and total isolation--and hovering embarrassments of all kinds. The fresh baked bread is good...the threat of homemade jeans, not so much.

It would be nice to go back to that old suburban life...or some grown up, high school version of it, complete with nice, normal boyfriends who wear crew neck sweaters and like social studies. So, what's wrong with normal? Well, kind of everything. She knows that, of course, why else would she learn bass and join Jam Band, how else would she know to idolize infamous wild-child and high school senior Emma (her best friend Sarah's older sister), why else would she get arrested while doing a school project on a local freedom school (jail was not part of the assignment). And, why else would she kind of be falling in "like" with a boy named Monster--yes, that is his real name. Janie was going for normal, but she missed her mark by about ten miles...and we mean that as a compliment.

Frances O'Roark Dowell's fierce humor and keen eye make her YA debut literary and wise. In the spirit of John Green and E. Lockhart, Dowell's relatable, quirky characters and clever, fluid writing prove that growing up gets complicated...and normal is WAY overrated.

Sample chapter

Chapter One More Tales of the Amazing Farm Girl No one can figure out where the terrible smell is coming from, but everyone on the bus this morning can smell it and has an opinion. "Dude, I bet we just ran over a skunk!" yells out Stoner Guy No. 1 from the back of the bus. "That happened to us when I was a kid. We had to get rid of our car, 'cause the smell was, like, permanent." "No way, dude," comes the reply from his compadre, Stoner Guy No. 2. "That's not skunk. That is definitely fecund matter we're smelling." " Fecal , dude, fecal ," Stoner Guy No. 1 corrects him. "That's what I'm saying, dude." As it turns out, what we're smelling is my shoe. Or, more to the point, the fecund matter that has attached itself to my shoe. Goat poop. The general din that erupts around me when the source of the terrible smell is traced to my left foot mostly consists of hooting, jeering, and a collective plea for me to throw the offending ballet flat out the window. "No throwing anything from the windows," Steve, our bus driver, yells out from the front. "I don't care how bad it stinks." All the kids sitting near me move to the back of the bus, cramming in three and even four to a seat, so I'm sitting alone in a sea of empty rows. Not just my face, but my whole body, has turned hot lava red. Farm Girl strikes again. I mentally retrace my smelly steps to the bus stop, back down the driveway to the house, in through the front door, out through the back door, and all the way to the goat pen. Milking the goats every morning is the first chore of my day, and on school days, when I'm running late, I sometimes risk wearing my civilian clothes, careful not to squirt or spill any goat milk on my jeans, and very, very careful to avoid the fragrant goat poop pellets. This morning I was running later than usual and milked the girls at warp speed. I recall being proud not to have gotten any milk on myself or even on the ground. Clearly I should have focused less on the goats' milk and more on their other bodily excretions. As soon as the bus pulls up to school, I make my escape and sprint to the girls' bathroom on the second floor by the art room, hoping it won't be as populated as the more conveniently located first-floor bathroom. I find two girls huddled by the radiator grille, one crying, the other comforting her. They appear to be the only people in here. The comforter glares at me for invading their space, and I smile back lamely, holding up my shoe. "Unfortunate incident," I explain, sounding possibly even dumber than I feel. "Just ignore me." The sobbing girl sniffs the air and gasps, "What's that smell?" I grab a wad of paper towels from the dispenser. "My shoe. Sorry. I stepped in some goat poop this morning. It must have been really fresh, too, because usually goat manure doesn't stink that much. The pellets are generally pretty dry." Sobbing Girl's eyes widen in recognition. "Aren't you in my PE class? Didn't you, like, one time have this horrible rash on your legs? From hay or something?" "It was actually this organic fertilizer my dad was trying," I explain, trying to pretend we're having a perfectly normal teenage girl conversation. "Turns out I'm allergic to worm castings. But I'm not actually allergic to worms. Go figure." The girls stare at each other a second and crack up. "Wow!" Sobbing Girl says. "That's the most insane thing anyone has ever said to me! You are totally weird." Gosh, I'm glad I could cheer her up. The girls leave, still giggling, and I scrub my shoe until there is only the faintest whiff of goat matter left. I slip the shoe on my foot, grab my backpack, and hurry out the bathroom toward my locker, eyes downward. With any luck, nobody from my bus will be around, and if they are, they won't notice me. "Nice shoes!" someone yells out from a group of jocks huddled around a locker. "You oughta bottle that smell. Eau de Crap!" I breathe in deeply through my nose, an exercise I read about in my best friend Sarah's yoga magazine. Breathe in, focus deeply on an image you find pleasing and relaxing, breathe out. My rebel brain immediately envisions the farm on a summer morning, the air already hazy, butterflies floating across the wildflowers. I see the house with its wraparound porch, fresh white paint, cerulean blue shutters. I hear the slam of a screen door, the peaceful clucking of chickens. Ah, yes, our farm. How relaxing to meditate on the place that has made me the laughingstock of the ninth grade and probably the biggest loser in the entire school. And to think it was my idea to live there in the first place. © 2011 Frances O'Roark Dowell Excerpted from Ten Miles Past Normal by Frances O'Roark Dowell All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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