Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Burst

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Longlisted for the 2024 Joyce Carol Oates Prize


Winner, Independent Publisher Book Awards, Silver Medal - Literary Fiction


Featured on PBS NewsHour


Named by Good Morning America, New York Post, and Los Angeles Daily News as one of the Best Books of Spring 2023


A deeply moving debut novel from the award-winning author of Yes, Yes, Cherries ("Funny, brave, and amazing"—Lorrie Moore) that explores the relationship complexities between mothers and daughters, the desire to escape, and the longing to connect. Viva has always found ways to manage her mother's impulsive, eccentric and addictive personality. She's had to—for her entire life, it has always been Viva and Charlotte against the world. After accidentally discovering an innate ability for dance, Viva chases her new passion with the same fervor with which her mother chases the bottle. Over the years, Viva's talent becomes a ticket to a life of her own, and as she moves further away from home to pursue her dream, Charlotte struggles to make peace with her own past as a failed artist and the effects of her addiction. When tragedy strikes, Viva begins a downward spiral and must decide whether she will repeat her mother's mistakes or finally take control of her life. Told from interwoven perspectives with lyrical prose as deft as a choreographed dance.

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Mary Otis's debut novel examines a complicated, evolving mother-daughter relationship. Lisa Flanagan delivers an expressive narration without relying on character voices to bring the story to life. She employs pacing, emotion, and a precise tempo as she portrays Viva and her unconventional, unstable mother, Charlotte, who rely on the kindness of others for meals and housing throughout Viva's nomadic childhood. Flanagan expresses Viva's yearning for stability as her view of her mother's life shifts and changes. At that point, Viva begins to distance herself from Charlotte and works to avoid her mother's self-destructive choices. We hear regret, hurt, isolation, and yearning as Charlotte struggles to maintain their relationship. Otis's Author's Note shares truths that add to this story's realism. N.E.M. © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 13, 2023
      Otis chronicles a mother’s and daughter’s pursuits of elusive love in her perceptive debut novel (after the collection Yes, Yes, Cherries). In a Cape Cod trailer park in 1979, single mother Charlotte uses her sex appeal and strong personality to keep herself and her 11-year-old daughter, Viva, afloat. Too often, however, Charlotte’s alcoholism results in the two having to pick up stakes, keeping them on the move from generous relatives to besotted boyfriends throughout Viva’s youth. At a free day camp, Viva discovers a love of dance, which Charlotte helps nurture. It’s a bittersweet development, as Charlotte, a onetime aspiring artist, is reminded of her squandered potential (“What kind of mother envied her own daughter’s joy?”). As an adult 15 years later, Viva must contend with her own fractured dreams—and with the fear of turning into the worst version of her mother. Otis captures the colorful chaos of Viva’s early years, acknowledging the damage but also the moments of joy. In lyrical language that expresses both Viva’s and Charlotte’s perspectives, Otis portrays a mother and daughter caught in a tense pas de deux, perpetually pushing one another away before returning to each other. This author continues to impress.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2023
      A new spin on the theme of entwined mothers and daughters. Debut novelist Otis follows the unstable Charlotte and her driven daughter, Viva, an aspiring dancer, from an eventful stint on Cape Cod in 1979 when Viva is 11 through the next couple of decades, with flashbacks to Charlotte's fraught encounters with the man who will become, though he doesn't know it, Viva's father. Charlotte and Viva are, like many a fictional mother-daughter pair, "a society of two." After the summer in Cape Cod, they move to California, where they stay with Charlotte's sister. Charlotte picks up a series of odd jobs, and Viva attends a performing arts high school and then college before moving to New York to start a career. When an accident brings that career to a halt, Viva returns to California and starts falling into the same self-destructive patterns that have stymied her mother even as her mother begins to experience ever more serious symptoms of mental and physical illness. While Viva is more sympathetic as a girl and a teenager than as an alcoholic 20-something with bad taste in men and no idea what to do with her life, and the subplot involving her father seems tacked on, Otis pays rapt attention not just to the two complicated women, but to the other characters with whom they interact, from the hippie couple with whom Charlotte shares a mutual dislike at their campground on Cape Cod to the longtime frenemy with whom Viva competes and the mean-spirited high school students she teaches in California. She steers ably away from clich� in what could easily have been a conventionally tense relationship between mother and daughter, documenting the ways in which both are distorted by the "umbilical cord" that stretches between them for decades but allowing them to be individuals with their own quirks and longings as well. A mostly satisfying variation on a familiar motif.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      July 1, 2023

      Otis's debut novel (after her short story collection Yes, Yes, Cherries) explores the intricacies of mother-daughter relationships with depth, humor, and sensitivity. Otis chronicles a mother and daughter's episodic journey from Massachusetts to California, starting in 1979 and continuing through the 1990s. Single mother Charlotte does everything she can to support her daughter Viva. Still, Charlotte's impulsive and addictive personality causes conflict and tension, often requiring the two to pick up stakes and move. While Viva once hoped to follow in her mother's footsteps, she later wishes to be nothing like her. Even so, Viva's driven nature echoes Charlotte's headstrong personality--the two are more alike than they know. As the pair navigate instability and chaos, Otis adroitly delves into the mysterious yet magical bond between mothers and daughters--how they find themselves reflected in one another, and how they grow into different individuals with their own dreams and aspirations. Narrator Lisa Flanagan portrays the multitude of characters in the novel splendidly and imbues the narrative with an air of grace. VERDICT A moving and relatable story; literary fiction fans will be pleased.--Enica Davis

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

subjects

Languages

  • English

Loading