Tampa by Alissa Nutting

Tampa

by Alissa Nutting

Celeste Price is an eighth-grade English teacher in suburban Tampa. She is attractive. She drives a red Corvette. Her husband, Ford, is rich, square-jawed and devoted to her. But Celeste has a secret. She has a singular sexual obsession - fourteen-year-old boys. It is a craving she pursues with sociopathic meticulousness and forethought.
Within weeks of her first term at a new school, Celeste has lured the charmingly modest Jack Patrick into her web - car rides after dark, rendezvous at Jack's house while his single father works the late shift, and body-slamming encounters in Celeste's empty classroom between periods. It is bliss.

Celeste must constantly confront the forces threatening their affair - the perpetual risk of exposure, Jack's father's own attraction to her, and the ticking clock as Jack leaves innocent boyhood behind. But the insatiable Celeste is remorseless. She deceives everyone, is close to no one and cares little for anything but her pleasure.

With crackling, stampeding, rampantly sexualized prose, Tampa is a grand, satirical, serio-comic examination of desire and a scorching literary debut.

Reviewed by clementine on

3 of 5 stars

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This book very successfully gets you in the head of a pedophile. That's good (because the author has done what she set out to do) and bad (because it's not a place anybody should want to be). I really enjoyed the prose; some of Celeste's rants had the same angry, self-righteous descriptiveness of Amy's narration in Gone Girl. Clearly Nutting is a good author - the book has a truly redeemable quality that helps it be more than just smut with shock value. I can't fault the writing, nor the readability, nor the impact. But, you know. It's a very uncomfortable book. Fascinating, but this isn't a place I want to visit ever again.

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  • 21 May, 2018: Reviewed