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Big Girl

A Novel

ebook
1 of 2 copies available
1 of 2 copies available
In this heartfelt, incisive novel, Danielle Steel celebrates the virtues of unconventional beauty while exploring deeply resonant issues of weight, self-image, sisterhood, and family. 
 

A chubby little girl with ordinary looks, Victoria Dawson has always felt out of place in her family, especially in body-conscious L.A. While her parents and sister can eat anything and not gain an ounce, Victoria must watch everything she eats, as well as endure her father’s belittling comments about her body and see her academic achievements go unacknowledged. Ice cream and oversized helpings of all the wrong foods give her comfort, but only briefly. The one thing she knows is that she has to get away from home, and after college in Chicago, she moves to New York City. 
Landing her dream job as a high school teacher, Victoria loves working with her students and wages war on her weight at the gym. Despite tension with her parents, Victoria remains close to her younger sister, Grace. Though they couldn’t be more different in looks, they love each other unconditionally. So when Grace announces her engagement to a man who is an exact replica of their narcissistic father, Victoria worries about her sister’s future happiness, and with no man of her own, she feels like a failure once again. As the wedding draws near, a chance encounter, a deeply upsetting betrayal, and a family confrontation lead to a turning point. 
Behind Victoria is a lifetime of hurt and neglect she has tried to forget. Ahead is a challenge and a risk: to accept herself as she is, celebrate it, and claim the victories she has fought so hard for and deserves. Big girl or not, she is terrific and discovers that herself.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 4, 2010
      Household name Steel (Going Home
      ) falls short of her best in her latest. Victoria Dawson has always felt like an outcast. When her little sister Grace is born, father Jim tells Victoria she was the “tester cake,” and they finally got it right with the beautiful Gracie. Victoria grows up in her sister’s shadow, and though she loves Gracie dearly, she’s anxious to leave home. The pain doesn’t stop there, though. Her father calls her first job at a prestigious private school in Manhattan “pathetic,” and Victoria begins a battle with her weight and her belief that she is unlovable (even though men pursue her). The premise of the story is sound, but it doesn’t ring true: the parents are two-dimensional, cruel monsters and Victoria seems to have everything: fantastic job, amazing apartment, perfect best friends. It’s hard to believe that her parents would still wield such power. Steel barely grazes the surface of an important topic, but it’s not reality that has positioned her at the top of bestseller lists.

    • Booklist

      February 15, 2010
      The latest Steel novel follows the life of Victoria Dawson, an unwanted, unloved, and unattractive girl who is rejected and ridiculed during her childhood, chiefly by her parents. Born into a family consisting of a domineering father and a spineless yet beautiful mother, Victoria, at least in her parents view, is a large and ugly child. Embarrassed by her looks, her parents focus their attention on their beautiful younger daughter, Gracie. Victoria also spends most of her childhood looking after Gracie, and Steel thickly lays on the Cinderella analogies. The story follows the two girls as they grow up, Victoria doomed to using her brains and Gracie her looks. Steel stays comfortably within stereotypes here, the starkly drawn characters of all of the major players never veer from their pigeonholed lot. The large and unlovely Victoria thrives in her career yet fails at romance. That is, until she loses some weight and has a nose job, which helps her to snare a man almost immediately. At the same time, the lovely Gracie appears to be reenacting her parents lives, marrying a distastefully domineering man who happily flaunts his philandering. No surprises, just a quick read with a predictable plot.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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