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I’ll Take You There

By Joyce Carol Oates

Joyce Carol Oates is one of the world’s most respected living novelists. ‘I’ll take You There’ is an intense, deeply moving story of how a young woman finds her place in the world.

‘In those days in the early 1960s we were not women yet but girls. This was, without irony perceived as our advantage.’

So begins ‘I’ll Take You There’, an astonishingly intimate and unsparing self-portrait of a young woman who comes of age in the most turbulent of American decades.

‘Anellia’ – as she sometimes calls herself – is a student at Syracuse University, the first time she has lived away from her family. Headstrong, passionate, occasionally obsessive, she is pitiless in exposing herself to her new life as she searches for a place in the world.

In her quest for belonging, ‘Anellia’ discovers the risks, and curious rewards, of confronting the world: being taken in, and then cruelly rejected by a ‘sisterhood’ of her fellow students, falling recklessly in love with an older graduate student who happens to be black, making a journey westward when summoned by a figure from her past who she believed to be dead. Through this triptych of events, the atoms of ‘Anellia’s’ life comes together as she begins her journey into adulthood.

This spellbinding novel confirms Oates as one of America’s most important writers. She has written some of the most enduring fiction of our times. ‘I’ll Take You There’ is a deeply moving, wry, intense examination of how a girl becomes a young woman.

Format: Paperback
Release Date: 26 Feb 2010
Pages: 304
ISBN: 978-0-00-714645-1
Price: £11.99 (Export Price) , £11.99, €None
Joyce Carol Oates is a novelist, critic, playwright, poet and author of short stories and is one of America’s most highly respected literary figures. She currently holds the post of Roger S. Berlind Distinguished Professor of Humanities at Princeton University. Her most recent novel, ‘The Gravedigger’s Daughter’, was published in 2007.

'Oates' precise and inspired writing is close to witchcraft.' Jeanne Moreau -

'This intense character study becomes a testament to spiritual resilience. It is an excellent addition to Oates' formidable canon.' Daily Telegraph -

'Maybe, just maybe, the Great American Novelist is a woman.' The Herald -