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GETTING CLEAN WITH STEVIE GREEN by Swan Huntley

GETTING CLEAN WITH STEVIE GREEN

by Swan Huntley

Pub Date: Jan. 25th, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-9821-5962-7
Publisher: Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster

A woman whose past is clouded by personal trauma tries to reinvent herself as a home-decluttering guru but quickly discovers the life in need of a deep clean may be her own.

Thirty-seven-year-old Stevie Green loves organizing “for the same reason that [she] loves vacuuming: immediate, tangible results, which [are] so unlike the slow, mysterious shifts of the internal self.” And over the past six months, she’s undergone many of the latter: finally getting sober; returning to her hometown of La Jolla and moving close to her mother; starting a burgeoning organization-and-personal-reinvention service; and gradually beginning to recover from a debilitating car accident. But the trajectory of her life is unceremoniously rocked by the arrival of Bonnie, her free-spirited younger sister—their relationship’s always been marked by an uncrossable rift—who is reeling from a recent breakup, and then a chance run-in with her estranged high school best friend, Chris. At her mother’s prodding, Stevie reluctantly takes Bonnie on as an assistant, and the two become a well-oiled team, helping each of their semidirectionless clients cast off unnecessary possessions “holding [them] back and weighing [them] down.” All the while, artifacts from Stevie’s own past keep snaking back into her life; she quickly learns how frustratingly slowly personal growth occurs and must reckon with the past’s tenacious grip on her life before she can make changes. Huntley has constructed a compelling protagonist who oscillates between obliviousness and excruciating self-awareness, building a complex internal landscape and allowing readers a layered understanding of Stevie's eventual personal evolution. The book is primarily narrated by Stevie, with shorter sections told from the perspectives of other characters. Stevie’s sections are by far the strongest; in general, some of the ancillary characters feel half-baked or cartoonish (Bonnie’s California surfer-girl dialect in particular becomes grating). Though the plot unspools in a somewhat unsurprising way and its emphasis on self-discovery can be heavy-handed, its core is animated by genuine emotional resonance—plus a thoughtful exploration of addiction, anxiety about sexual identity, and the ways family bonds shift in adulthood.

An enjoyable if sometimes well-worn take on the self discovery/recovery novel.