<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<entity>
  <id>1690203</id>
  <title>Tunneling: A Novel</title>
  <author>Beth Bosworth</author>
  <image>http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51HW3VQ8WGL._SX80_.jpg</image>
  <rating>3</rating>
  <description>Rachel Finch is twelve years old and in love&amp;#8212;not with a neighborhood boy, but with the Dewey decimal system, call numbers and the cellophane covers of library books . . . also with time travel, a superhero she knows only as S-Man and, above all, Franz Kafka. She considers herself a very different young girl&amp;#8212;until she makes the acquaintance of a classmate who challenges that sense of otherness. In this utterly inventive debut novel, we are irresistibly drawn into a world where Rachel, who many years later narrates our story, has begun to lead a double life. Severely asthmatic and deemed bookish and delicate by her family, she takes clandestine time-bending excursions with S-Man to rescue some of history&amp;#8217;s greatest literary geniuses. Swooping in on Shakespeare, Oscar Wilde and Chinua Achebe, among others, Rachel&amp;#8217;s rescue missions are a rollicking ride through literary history, while her day-to-day life in Teaneck, New Jersey, emotively reflects the civil rights movement in 1960s America. Writing with a confidence, intelligence and playfulness rare for a first-time novelist, Beth Bosworth has given us a book brimming with magical realism and boundless imagination, in which literary references, great humor and political consciousness fully blossom into a significance far beyond the grasp of a twelve-year-old girl. Witty and wise, with deftly rendered shadings of the heart, Tunneling is at once boldly fanciful and remarkably down-to-earth.</description>
  <reviews_count>1</reviews_count>
</entity>
