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Set between 1953 and 1968, Talk Teeny is a novel in linked vignettes that traces a childhood shaped by perception, instability, and constraint. Claire, born to intelligent but unreliable parents, reads by the age of three and enters adult spaces early, expecting language to function as a form of access. It does not.
In Virginia, she performs for coins in bars, a brief and instructive exchange that establishes the terms of her world. As the family moves through the mid-Atlantic and Northeast, Claire encounters the structures that define her position-school, class, gender, and the limits imposed by poverty. These pressures accumulate quietly, becoming visible through everyday encounters and small acts of exclusion.
Abuse, family instability, and shifting loyalties shape Claire's understanding of trust and authority, yet the novel refuses melodrama. Her older brother appears intermittently, a stabilizing yet unreliable presence, while other family figures offer partial guidance. .
Through it all, Claire discovers music, literature, and the emerging countercultures of the era-small openings into larger possibilities. Told through precise, understated scenes that accumulate into a life, Talk Teeny traces the objects, rituals, and fleeting moments that shape identity. For readers drawn to the compressed narratives of Jenny Offill and Lydia Davis and the tonal restraint of Mary Robison, it is an unsentimental portrait of intelligence, resilience, and becoming.
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