Rent Girl
R**K
Refreshingly Different
“Rent Girl” is an unconventional memoir written by Michelle Tea with extraordinary illustrations by Lauren McCubbin. The author documents her whimsical foray into the world of prostitution, while building upon and revealing the secrets (and not so secrets) of her lesbian lifestyle. She boldly enters the “magical mental territory” of prostitutes and relates the experience with stark honesty and overwhelming creativity.Early on she confesses, “I wanted to try things, everything, especially things that are illegal and have a faint whiff of glamour.” And she proceeds to do just that delving into a forbidden world that is foreign to most and is populated by a cast of complex and inventive characters of questionable authenticity. Brilliant descriptions of whores and their customers are augmented by the colorful illustrations.The work was on and off and she hated it much of the time. But the money was great, and she found some very creative ways to deal with the distasteful work. She writes about “. . . how it makes you mean, makes you vengeful; how it turns you into a greedy monster because no matter how much money they are giving you it is never enough, and you start to want their blood, their homes, their self esteem lying wet in the wastebasket like a shucked condom.” She would forget how much she hated it because she made so much money.Obviously, this book is not for everyone. But if you like the unconventional and have an open mind about sex, sexuality, and alternative lifestyles, it should suit you very well.
D**Y
thought provoking, powerful literature with typos
This is illustrated fiction. It isn't your average graphic novel. Imagine a book where most pages have their own illustrations. If you're looking for a titillating tale with hard-core lesbian "action" then this isn't the book for you.This reads like a true story and is told from the perspective of a flawed, vulnerable and entirely human prostitute. The writing is so intimate and unguarded that reading it felt almost voyeuristic. The writing is brutal, honest and beautiful. The illustrations frame the story in an equally brutal, honest and beautiful way. They serve to compliment the narrative and do not distract you from the story. It's clear to me that the illustrator and the writer shared the same vision here.The only detractor from what I would otherwise recommend as a "must buy" is the large number of typos. I'm not sure whether this was intentional, but it was extremely distracting. The typos made the book feel a little unpolished.
H**N
Beautiful and intense
Michelle Tea’s look back on her past life as a sex worker, and the friends, lovers, and colleagues who inhabited that world along with her, are showcased in an incredibly raw and tender way.
C**R
Five Stars
Love Michelle Tea's honesty
M**T
Interesting but littered with errors
Rent Girl is the story of a lesbian trying to make it in the world, when she finds out about her friend being an escort. Next thing you know she finds herself as a prostitute. This is where we read about her finding the work truly deplorable and how she hates men. She moves to the West coast and finds a new girlfriend and together they attempt to become drug dealers in order to visit Greece. When they realize they aren't cut out to be dealers, she gets back into prostitution, without getting the guys involved. Which is to say that she would put on lesbian shows with her girlfriend. In a nutshell, they can't afford the trip to Greece so they go to Disneyland instead.Grammatically, the book is an absolute mess. Not knowing the difference between then and than, multiple misspelled words, and half the time I wasn't really sure who was supposed to be speaking. I thought the illustrations did a good job of capturing her different emotions when it came to the difference of her being with the men, and then being with the women.
H**X
Five Stars
love this
N**L
pictures better than and outnumbered by words
I got this book because I've been exploring the graphic novel/comics medium for a while. I don't think it really fits in that medium. I'm not sure it fits anywhere.There are way too many words for this to be a graphic novel or comic, IMHO. It's a so-so story about a dyke hooker with a nice picture on every page. One gets the feeling the pictures are what makes this sale-able--I can't imagine any house publishing the words alone. (Though if they were to do so, they might at least edit the really annoying grammatical errors throughout.)I'm giving it three as a sort of benefit of the doubt--maybe I'm approaching it too narrowly and the picture book for grownups is coming back. The pictures are neat and do seem to flesh out (no pun intended) the fairly mundane narrative.Characters--there are some. You don't really care about them very much. Conflicts aplenty, but of the "then this happened" variety. The plot seems to wrap itself up tritely and in a hurry as if the author were just tired of the pointless exercise. To presume themes or metaphor or anything literary would be overdoing it.There are some charming narrative moments, however. And it's easy to read if you can ignore the dreadful lack of editing. (e.g. "Than" is always spelled "then", and sometimes it's as if the spellcheck stuck in the wrong word while trying to decipher a typo.)Going into the book, I had some guesses: a dyke prostitute probably hates the johns, will probably have a hard time being girlfriends with the woman who got her into the game, will probably have some interesting insights into the oldest profession. The last guess was dead wrong--nothing here showed me anything hollywood hasn't already. I thought a memoir of a dyke would at least present a complex portrait of the sex trade, but the portrait of the prostitute was a callous as any a man would write.When you buy a rent girl, you get sex. When you buy Rent Girl, you get a lackluster treatment of the lamest possible prostitute memoir.
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