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Bolt
Risk, a first novel by Ann Wood, was released in 2005 by
Leapfrog
Press.<ref> </ref>
Bolt Risk
is a first novel by Ann Wood about a young woman who becomes
involved in the sex and entertainment industries in
Los Angeles.
The short
novel tells the tale of a "good" girl, sick of the pretense of her
exclusive
New
England College, who becomes an assistant to a B-list
Hollywood actress.
Fleeing the boredom of the tinsel town fringe, she lands a job as a
stripper and begins a
harrowing journey through the underworld of Los Angeles dive bars,
phone sex factories, groupies and drug motels.
The author has
also written a screenplay for the book's movie adaptation, being
produced by Michael Mailer Films.
Reviews
Publishers Weekly
wrrote that "Wood's debut features plenty of sex, drugs and rock
'n' roll [...] Welcomed as voyeurs, readers are given an insider's
look into the subculture created by the smart and talented who
arrive in L.A. with big dreams and wind up with big addictions.
[It] speaks to aliened teenagers, world-weary hipsters and cynical
survivors of all types." The review criticized the author's
"sometimes awkward prose."<ref>Review,
Publishers
Weekly]], November 2005, accessed via Ebsco Host Web site,
(ebscohost.com) on November 10, 2007</ref>
The Washington Post called the book, "As
bracing as a shot of rotgut whiskey, the brutal, unflinching prose
is a tonic for the chick-lit weary." Tom Gogola, reviewing
the book in the New Haven Advocate, wrote, that "it kills
chick lit dead" as a "literate, visceral, foul-mouthed
bildungsroman".
According to a review in
Booklist, "The
narrator's profound detachment [...] quickly wears thin, and some
hints at the narrator's inner life (flashbacks to her abusive
father, for example) feel disjointed and purposeful.
Still, some readers may be attracted by the vicarious,
soft-porn tour through L.A. nightlife," and the book has "sparks of
authenticity."<ref>Engberg, Gillian, Booklist
,
December 1,
2005, accessed via Newsbank,
November 10,
2007</ref>
Kirkus
Reviews praised the book for its "hypnotically spare",
"bracingly frank" and at times "admirably sharp" prose as well as
the "controlled, deliberately jagged" and "frenetic" pace of the
narrative, but said the "stylized smartness" of the narrator
sometimes gets intrusive.<ref>Review, Kirkus Reviews,
November 1,
2005, accessed via Ebsco Host
Web site, (ebscohost.com) on November 10, 2007</ref>
"Bolt Risk reads like a memoir, but
without the reflection", wrote Brian Leingang in a review at
NewPages.com. He also praised the book for its fast
pacing, with "the intensity, brevity and depth of a rock song.
It’s gritty, blunt and fun. [...]
The goal of Ann
Wood’s novel is to tell a cool story [...] It’s a story that will
pull you in, chew you up and spit you out, leaving you feeling used
and degraded, but grateful for the experience."<ref>[1670]Leingang, Brian, review of
Bolt Risk
at NewPages.com
online magazine, accessed
November 10,
2007</ref>
References
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