Product Details
The Girls

The Girls
By Lori Lansens

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'I have never looked into my sister's eyes. I have never bathed alone. I have never stood in the grass at night and raised my arms to a beguiling moon. I've never used an aeroplane bathroom. Or worn a hat. Or been kissed like that...So many things I've never done, but oh, how I've been loved. And, if such things were to be, I'd live a thousand times as me, to be loved so exponentially' In twenty-nine years, Rose Darlen has never spent a moment apart from her twin sister, Ruby. She has never gone for a solitary walk or had a private conversation. Yet, in all that time, she has never once looked into Ruby's eyes. Joined at the head, 'The Girls' (as they are known in their small town) attempt to lead a normal life, but can't help being extraordinary. Now almost thirty, Rose and Ruby are on the verge of becoming the oldest living craniopagus twins in history, but they are remarkable for a lot more than their unusual sisterly bond.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #20290 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-01-11
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 352 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
'An immensely readable novel, compelling and convincing. The Girls is an enchanting blend of the extraordinary and the everyday' New Statesman 'Perfectly pitched... an utterly heartwarming tale, without any traces of mawkishness. Anyone with a sister will relate to this' Book of the Month, Marie Claire 'Beautifully written and deeply moving, it's unforgettable' Image magazine

New Statesman
'An immensely readable novel, compelling and convincing. The Girls is an enchanting blend of the extraordinary and the everyday'

Book of the Month - Marie Claire
'Perfectly pitched...an utterly heart-warming tale, without any traces of mawkishness. Anyone with a sister will relate to this'


Customer Reviews

"You girls are remarkable, most people can't say that"4
Missing presumed dead, the young Larry Merkel was reportedly the first causality of the giant tornado that touched down one afternoon in the small town of Leaford in Southern Ontario. The citizens also blamed the sudden death of Dr. Ruttle on the storm, the stress from the tornado purportedly inducing his massive heart attack.

Even more bizarre is the precipitous arrival of Ruby and Rose Darlen - the world's longest surviving conjoined craniopagus twins - born on that fateful day in 1974. With their mother allegedly dying alone in Toronto of sepsis eight weeks postpartum, the twins were adopted by a kindly overweight nurse who was present at the birth, and one of the only people who didn't freak out at the sight of them.

Almost at once, Aunt Lovey falls in love with these fragile and delicate young girls and together with her Canadian Slovakian husband, raises them on their bucolic and isolated farm, trying to give them as normal lives as possible. As they grow older, the girls are determined not to let their situation get the better of them, and are reasonably accepted by the townsfolk of Leaford.

Rose and Ruby are taught to be independent and they pour themselves into school and helping out around the farm. As adults, they obtain employment at the local library, shelving books and reading to school groups. Rose discovers she has a talent for writing - a straight A student she embarks on a novel about her life and is told by Aunt Lovey to write her story fearlessly, "not just as a conjoined twin but as a human being and as a woman."

Ruby develops an interest in local Indian archeology, a rather mediocre student she enjoys American sitcoms, but is plagued by chronic gastrointestinal troubles and, at times, severely restricts Rose, especially when she gets sick. The drama unfolds as the two girls race against time to complete their story: Aunt Lovey tells them that in adulthood, the tangled veins in their heads would likely give them trouble. And now at twenty-nine, and constantly plagued by headaches, an aneurysm in Rose's brain is threatening to kill them both.

Rose's intellectual diligence eventually pays off. The book is being written and with the odd passage or two from Rose, the true natures of these amazing girls come to life. It's an existence that is habitually fraught with heartache and longing, and with lives that have been at times isolated and strange, but it's also a life that is full of love, travel, work, and even sex.

Obviously Author Lori Lansens has great empathy for her characters and she has evidently well researched the lives of craniopagus twins. Full of ardor and purpose, the author's appeal for understanding and for public awareness is both trenchant and incisive. Bit by bit she steadily reveals Rose and Ruby's inner world, shedding back the layers and exposing all their hopes and dreams, fears and insecurities.

Rose especially learns the hard lesson that life isn't always fair and even less for a girl that is attached to her sister. The more fully formed and for the most part the healthier of the two; Rose often threatens to sink under the weight of wonder and the weight of worry, "humming some secret place into being." And the passages where she ponders what it might be like to be her own woman, this other girl the only that only she can see, are some of the most intensely evocative of the novel.

Although these girls deeply love each other - and are connected with an energy that is not only physical but also acutely spiritual - there's a real sense of longing for what it might have been like to live a life separate, where there's "a girl called She, who is not We, the girl who sadly Rose or Ruby will never be."

Lansens has written a deeply emotional novel, her heroines may be physically flawed, but in the end they are able to transcend the strictures of their bodies, ultimately emboldened by the creation of a very unique and exceptional life together. Mike Leonard June 06.

Beguiling, lingering tale of sisterhood and identity3
The Girls by Lori Lansens

This is, as Arthur Golden says on the front cover, a remarkable book. Remarkable because it is the utterly engrossing story of two extraordinary conjoined twins. They are not extraordinary because they are conjoined - although that in itself is remarkable enough - but because they are such warm, lively and sympathetic characters. Lansens device of distinguishing between the voices of Rose and Ruby works very well, so well in fact that the different type face employed for each sister really isn't necessary: they are so clearly each their own person.

Rose and Ruby, born in the midst of a tornado, are abandoned by their natural mother and taken in by the nurse, Aunt Lovey, who delivered them. (I want an Aunt Lovey of my own please.) Aunt Lovey is married to Stash, a Slovak immigrant to the United States: his history and distinct cultural identity give the novel a greater scope than is often found in popular fiction and Larsens makes good use of it.

There's no denying I enjoyed reading The Girls. Despite the sometimes disturbing subject matter and a continually growing foreboding of untimely death, there is little hint of darkness, and Larsens navigates the reader through the ups and downs of Rose and Ruby's childhood with such skill and warmth, that it becomes a celebration of life rather than a tale of illness and death. Yet, put the book down for a moment or close the pages for the final time, and there seems to be something a little thin, a little hollow, about the whole. A missed opportunity, perhaps? Or a sense that there really could have been so much more. Or perhaps it's just a general sadness that there's no going back to meet two such wonderful people again. I doubt that this is a `great' book, as some reviewers have claimed, but it is touching and tender, and good: a novel that will linger in the mind for a long time.

Courtesy of Teens Read Too5
In what has to be the best blend of heartbreaking sadness and unbelievable joy, author Lori Lansens has managed to write a novel about two girls that you will not soon forget -- if ever. After I finished THE GIRLS, I felt many emotions, but the strongest was that I had just read the story of two of my best and dearest friends. And even though I know that this story is fiction, I can't help but think that somewhere, two girls share a life that is a lot like that of Rose and Ruby Darlen.

Rose and Ruby are twins, yes, but they are also so much more. They are craniopagus twins, born conjoined at the right side of the head. As Rose puts it, she's never looked into her sister's eyes, she's never bathed alone, and she's never taken a solo walk. But what Rose lacks in aloneness is made up for with the closeness that she shares with Ruby, her sister, best friend, confidant, and greatest admirer.

The Darlen sisters were born in the small town of Leaford on the same day that a tornado struck the town and scooped up a young boy named Larry Merkel, who was never seen again. On the day that their mother, a young, frightened woman who called herself Elizabeth Taylor, gave birth, she was attended to by a devoted nurse known as Lovey. When the girls' mother later disappeared a week after that fateful day, much as Larry Merkel had been blown into the wind, it was Lovey Darlen who chose the girls as her own -- or, rather, they chose each other.

As Rose and Ruby struggle to learn to live together and yet retain their own individuality, it is their Aunt Lovey and Uncle Stash who provide the love, comfort, and stability that the girls need. Being a conjoined twin has both its benefits and detriments, as both girls learn from an early age. But with the love of their family and the help, support, and dedication of a wonderful cast of supporting characters, the Darlen girls make a name for themselves in Leaford.

THE GIRLS is written as an autobiography, started by Rose to tell the story of her life -- and, with it, the story of Ruby's life, as well. Interspersed with chapters written by Ruby herself, the story doesn't always unfold in chronological order. The things Rose deems important, of course, don't always coincide with what Ruby believes to be necessity.

I laughed while reading this novel, and many times I cried. I went through joy and sorrow, much as the characters did. This is the first story I've read in a very long time that moved me to feel what the characters felt, to feel, in the end, as if I knew them. I applaud Ms. Lansens for her wonderful writing skills, and, although I am sad to say goodbye to Rose and Ruby Darlen, I wish them the best that life has to offer.

Reviewed by: Jennifer Wardrip, aka "The Genius"