In That Summer There, we witnessed as spectators step by step, day after day in this bittersweet 300-page chronicle the first steps in Rose’s grown-up, adult life. Nothing vital but essential. Mariko and Jillian Tamaki this time bring us to New York following a trio of girls, Zoe and Dani, high school friends and Fiona, the latter’s friend, an art student with her. A visit to the Big Apple on 448 pages, a pagination which could be confusing but which in reality lives up to this encounter where, as in This Summer There, we discover a new world, an initiatory journey of which New York is the scene with its realities, unsaid things, his feelings and three young girls in search of destiny and a future.
At Newark airport, Zoe and Dani meet again, they are Canadian. Zoe had her head shaved. Fiona arrives at university with Dani. Young girl with a very calm character and bordering on authoritarian. The three of them take the subway to New York where they begin to talk about their future. Arrival at Pennsylvania Station and Manhattan. First pizzas and small hotel with strict rules. And off we go to wander the streets and avenues, Times Square. Fiona came often. Anecdotes on alcohol consumption, Fiona leads the way and is not insensitive to Zoe. Museum, Starbucks, questions about art, Gap where Zoe is dressed. Trendy neighborhood, digressions, clothes, second-hand clothes.
A difficult book to understand but it’s not useful. The main thing is to be good with girls and when you know New York you also find your own brands. Relationship between Zoe and Fiona, Dani on the sidelines, the days pass. Ground Zero, Soho, shopping, Grand Central, you name it. Big Apple is only a pretext for a triple state of affairs, friendly and sexual, for the freedom to travel and discover new worlds. You shouldn’t miss this city movie with a Liza Minelli background.
New York, New York, Rue de Sèvres, €25
2024-01-07 07:00:40
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