Early on, Lauren seizes on the idea, floating in the family, that she could one day be a movie star, and Lauren takes steps in that direction, enrolling in the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. But Lauren's life is changed forever when tragedy strikes and she is forced to grow up fast and adjust to her new normal. Nicholson eschews conventional scenecraft and pacing for summarized reports of Lauren’s experiences that sound like actual diary entries (antsy budgeting; kisses noted; movies logged as viewed). Eight Mile High paints the emotional life and the everyday detail of a determined and intelligent young girl with insight and some playful wit. The novel’s present is like a fog of feeling from which milestones and adversities suddenly emerge or vanish; the storytelling emphasizes how choices become habits and fates become sealed.
Those unusual choices, plus a tendency toward long paragraphs, diminish narrative, though the story, turning on inheritances and what sense Lauren can make of what others want of her, builds to surprising, even noir-ish twists. Eight Miles High covers wide swathes of a young woman’s learning how to live, from crawling to surviving Los Angeles.
Takeaway: A young star-to-be’s surprising coming-of-age, in experimental journal form.
Comparable Titles: Alissa DeRogatis’s Call it What You Want, Bethany C. Morrow's So Many Beginnings.
Production grades
Cover: B
Design and typography: N/A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: C
Marketing copy: C