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When Amy set
out to write a novel, and thus establish herself as a writer to
be reckoned with, she was faced with a problem. Although most
novelists begin semi-autobiographically, her own life in the small
town of Crooked River-with its endless cycles of mowing lawns
and setting tables-was far too boring. No one could possibly be
interested in what she had to say if she were the subject.
That drove
Amy to tell a thinly-veiled and largely-invented story about Kalicia,
easily the most interesting girl in school. Where Amy lacked substance,
Kalicia was bursting with it. That decision to write Kalicia's
life meant she had to somehow learn about, or invent, what Kalicia
meant to the townspeople.
Pure invention
was difficult to accomplish, and realism a bridge too far, and
Amy was caught between the Kalicia in her school and the fantastical
greenhouse girl she imagined her to be.
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