Enormously visceral, emotionally gripping, and imbued with the belief
that justice is possible even after the most horrific of crimes, Alice
Sebold's compelling memoir of her rape at the age of eighteen is a story
that takes hold of you and won't let go.
Sebold fulfills a promise that she made to herself in the very tunnel
where she was raped: someday she would write a book about her experience.
With Lucky she delivers on that promise with mordant wit and an
eye for life's absurdities, as she describes what she was like both as
a young girl before the rape and how that rape changed but did not sink
the woman she later became.
It is Alice's indomitable spirit that we come to know in these pages.
The same young woman who sets her sights on becoming an Ethel Merman-style
diva one day (despite her braces, bad complexion, and extra weight) encounters
what is still thought of today as the crime from which no woman can ever
really recover. In an account that is at once heartrending and hilarious,
we see Alice's spirit prevail as she struggles to have a normal college
experience in the aftermath of this harrowing, life-changing event.
No less gripping is the almost unbelievable role that coincidence plays
in the unfolding of Sebold's narrative. Her case, placed in the inactive
file, is miraculously opened again six months later when she sees her
rapist on the street. This begins the long road to what dominates these
pages: the struggle for triumph and understanding -- in the courtroom
and outside in the world.
Lucky is, quite simply, a real-life thriller. In its literary
style and narrative tension we never lose sight of why this life story
is worth reading. At the end we are left standing in the wake of devastating
violence, and, like the writer, we have come to know what it means to
survive.