



Manmade Constellations
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3.3 • 3 Ratings
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
A modern-day love story that explores childhood trauma, the boundaries between idealism and self-righteousness, and the heartaches we must confront in order to chart our courses forward.
Lo Gunderson feels trapped in her small midwestern hometown until she sees an ad for a free car in the local paper. To maintain her staunch anticapitalist values, she refuses to spend money on what she can find for free, so this car is the perfect ticket out of the town. Though it doesn’t cost any money, it still comes with a price. Blanche Peterson is dying and asks for a single favor—that Lo track down her estranged son, whom Blanche hasn’t seen in over a decade.
Before she can decide whether to fulfill Blanche’s dying wish, she needs to get the car started. She’s helped by John Blank, a Southern auto mechanic who moved up north for a fresh start. Despite vastly different backgrounds, they share an electrifying mutual attraction that threatens to upend Lo’s carefully constructed worldview.
Meanwhile, Blanche’s son, Jason, finds himself adrift after an argument with his girlfriend. Memories of his negligent mother and the death of his father resurface for the first time in years as he travels across the country searching for what comes next.
Manmade Constellations is a smart, magnetic, and emotional novel dedicated to the American landscape, exploring how taking to the open road teaches lessons that can’t be learned at home.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Lazzara's notable debut focuses on a road trip undertaken by two 20-somethings from a small Minnesota town at the behest of a dying woman. Blanche Peterson places an ad seeking help with tracking down her estranged son, Jason, and bringing him back to Elysian, Minn., to say goodbye. Lo Gunderson answers, and Blanche offers Lo her car. John Blank, whom Lo meets when she needs a mechanic, accompanies her on the trip and hopes to visit the sister he hasn't seen in years, while Lo considers visiting the mom she never knew. They become intimate, though Lo has plans to leave Elysian. Meanwhile, Jason leaves the farm he works for in Twin Falls, Idaho, after an argument with his now pregnant partner, and drives around the country, contemplating the alcoholic Blanche and the accident that killed his dad. The reader learns about Jason's small-town connection to Lo and how his tumultuous family story serves as a foil to Lo's loving childhood with her father, the town judge. Lazzara is skillful at making readers care for a sanctimonious character like Lo, a self-identified "freegan" who loathes consumption and lives off free items but whose preachiness only leads to interpersonal conflicts. Readers will enjoy this new voice.