The Unfinished Life of Addison Stone
The Unfinished Life of Addison Stone
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Random House
Annotation: When a celebrated New York City teenager, known for her subversive street art, mysteriously dies, her life is examined in a series of interviews with her parents, friends, boyfriends, mentors, and critics.
Genre: [Mystery fiction]
 
Reviews: 8
Catalog Number: #127457
Format: Perma-Bound Edition
Special Formats: Inventory Sale Inventory Sale
Publisher: Random House
Copyright Date: 2016
Edition Date: 2014 Release Date: 08/23/16
Pages: 241 pages
ISBN: Publisher: 1-616-95596-1 Perma-Bound: 0-605-95145-4
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-1-616-95596-0 Perma-Bound: 978-0-605-95145-7
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2014009576
Dimensions: 22 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Tue Jul 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)

Starred Review The cover aturing a photographic negative of a girl with a red X on it ys below the title, "A Novel." But readers can't be blamed if they assume this is the story of a real girl whose art ethos led to a tumultuous life and a mysterious death. Griffin, a two-time National Book Award finalist and one of the best YA authors around, attempts something very different here: a Rashomon-like take on a young girl's life, highlighted by photos of the girl and her art, all in an attempt to put the unknowable Addison more within the reader's grasp. But are there so many Addisons (or at least so many divergent voices who contribute their version of Addison) that trying to re-create her is a futile task? The conceit is this: 17-year-old Addison Stone, portraitist and performance artist, has died, falling off a scaffold as she she tried to place a billboard on the Manhattan Bridge overpass. Was it an accident? Suicide? Murder? An author, named Adele Griffin, who briefly taught Stone in a writing class, decides to write a book about the wild child who took New York by storm. She interviews dozens of those closest to the young artist mily, friends, mentors, boyfriends learn who Addison was and why she died. To bring the story closer, the book uses photos of real-life model Giza Lagarce as Addison (see above), and the pictures do mirror the text, capturing a young woman, sensual and brooding. In addition, three young artists from the Rhode Island School of Design were commissioned to create renditions of Addison's artwork at various stages, all of which adds authenticity to the story. But it is the recollections that truly bring Addison alive. One after another, they remember: the parents who didn't understand, the best friend who did, a first boyfriend. Their contradictions only add to the richness of the portrait. Exceptionally insightful is well-off cousin Madison. When Allison changes her name to Addison, Madison understands it's Addison's way of both taking away from Maddy and adding to herself, grabbing some of what she feels she lacks in her own life. It's Madison, too, who was there for the appearance of the ghosts who worked their way inside Addison's brain. Manifestations of the schizophrenia Addison was to develop or something supernatural? After Addison gets to New York, a telling familiarity sets in. The rich boyfriend, the art dealer who has his own interests at heart. Then, a more serious boy, another artist, who understands he's out of his depth with her. This is the part of the story that Griffin gets so right: a shining star gives off light, but it's impossible to bottle. People try to understand, to help, to save, but a mercurial personality, especially one as driven as Addison, doesn't know what she needs, making the helpers ultimately helpless. There are parts of this book that distract from rather than build the narrative. The cause of Addison's death seems more a red herring than a true mystery. And, at times, ironically, the visuals get in the way of the story. For instance, though much of of the art shown is solid, even occasionally startling, some of it just seems, well, average. As do the images of Addison's last boyfriend, who is described much more intriguingly in words than in pictures. This novel is, however, a terrific experiment, something fresh and hard to put down. It gives a sense of both the artistic temperament and the nature of madness d the sometimes thin line in between.

School Library Journal Starred Review (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)

Gr 8 Up-Everyone knows who Addison Stone was, even if they didn't know anything about her. Addy was a small-town girl with dreams of artistic immortality. Her talent was incredible, and she landed an agent almost the moment she set foot in New York at the age of 17. Soon her life became a whirlwind of parties, love affairs, and bursts of creativity. But Addison was keeping secrets, and burning too brightly. It seems, looking back, that her life was destined to end early, and tragically. This fictional biography of a visual and performance artist Addison Stone is compelling and tragic from the very first page. Griffin tells the teen's story through compiled interview excerpts from those who knew, loved, and hated her. The media, which include texts to and from her friends, paint a picture of a brilliant artist full of life and potential, but also reveal the young woman's unbalanced mental state and her loved ones' concern. Interspersed are photos and reproductions of the protagonist's artwork, magazine covers and articles, and interviews with Addison herself for various publications, layering level upon level of reality to the story. Readers will be fascinated with the novel and caught up in the drama right up to the end.— Heather Miller Cover, Homewood Public Library, AL

Horn Book

In this faux investigative biography, Griffin conjures an edgy artist--Addison Stone--who died tragically at age eighteen. To chronicle her subject's life and probe her suspicious death, Griffin presents material from (fictional) interviews, along with photographs of Addison and reproductions of her artwork. What could feel disjointed instead works to provide an intimate and cohesive portrait of a complex girl.

Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

In a faux biography of a deceased teenage rising star in the art world, Griffin (Loud Awake and Lost) builds a novel around interviews from people involved in Addison-s life before she died, excerpts from media coverage of her rapidly growing fame, photographs of Addison and her friends, and images of her artwork. The myriad voices include her friends and neighbors from back home in Rhode Island, the teachers who helped engineer her success, the boys she became involved with, the hard-partying crowd she ran with in New York City, her high-powered art dealer, and the psychiatrist who prescribed her antipsychotic medication. As they recount how talented, beautiful, cruel, difficult, or tragic Addison was in life, they often reveal their own insecurities, arrogance, ulterior motives, and desire to share Addison-s fame. Griffin offers incisive commentary on mental illness and the frenzy around (and pressures induced by) celebrity, especially surrounding young women. Defined primarily by the contradictory accounts of those around her, Addison remains something of a cipher even by book-s end. Ages 14-up. Agent: Emily Van Beek, Folio Literary Management. (Aug.)-

Voice of Youth Advocates

The death of the beautiful young artist Addison Stone has shaken the art world. Always talented, when Addison moved to New York City, she found quick fame through her volatile artwork, behavior, and relationships. When she dies under mysterious circumstances that may have been intentional, others step in to tell their versions of Addison's story, from her first-grade teacher to her ex-boyfriends. Presented in the style of a celebrity biography, the novel presents Addison's life through a series of excerpts from interviews with Addison's friends, family, and acquaintances, integrating photographs of Addison and samples of her artwork throughout the story.The novel's unusual format results in a fast-paced, engaging read. Tormented by mental illness or possibly the supernatural, Addison is an unpredictable and compelling central figure. Young readers will be intrigued by this edgy artist who goes from small-town poverty to the New York art scene. Although it can be challenging to keep up with the many characters who provide their version of Addison's story, Griffin effectively negotiates their different voices. The photographs, of a model hired to play Addison, and the artwork, taken from the portfolios of three Rhode Island School of Design students, add an interesting visual component to the story, charting Addison Stone's progression as an artist and lending credibility to this pseudo-biography. At the same time, many of the supposedly candid photographs feel staged and are, as such, sometimes distracting, but, like some of the exaggerated claims made by the interviewees, this may be an intentional component of the author's commentary on celebrity.Samantha Godbey.

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Tue Jul 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)
School Library Journal Starred Review (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Voice of Youth Advocates
Wilson's High School Catalog
Word Count: 59,753
Reading Level: 5.4
Interest Level: 9-12
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 5.4 / points: 9.0 / quiz: 167761 / grade: Upper Grades
Reading Counts!: reading level:5.6 / points:14.0 / quiz:Q64112
Lexile: HL760L
PROLOGUE
I met Addison Stone only once. She had enrolled as a freshman in my creative writing workshop at Pratt Institute. There were only six other students in my class, and as a visiting instructor, I was happy we'd be such a tight group. Fifteen minutes into the session, I'd figured this "A. Stone" person wasn't attending. So when a girl skittered in, late and unapologetic, I was annoyed.
        She was striking: tall yet delicate, with pale skin and dark eyes and two braids like a pair of flat black ropes past her shoulders. The scars on her wrists caught me off guard. She didn't speak, not even to apologize for being late. Perhaps most telling, she scraped back the only empty chair so that it stood outside the circle I'd arranged. When she sat, her paint-spattered arms dropped at her sides as if she had no use of them.
       We'd been making introductions, so I started over for her benefit. We went around the circle again: a few sentences each about who we were and where we'd come from. When we got to Addison, she shook her head.
       "I'm not here yet," she said softly. Startled, some of the other students looked to me for a reaction. Who did this girl think she was? I had none. I was thinking, Who'd remember anything else about that day except for the girl who told them she wasn't there?

Before they left, I gave an assignment: pick a memory and describe it in the voice of yourself at the age you lived through it. One paragraph or one page--no more. Due in my inbox by five o'clock on Friday. At 5:13 on Friday, Addison's essay hit:

     I'm last. I'm late. I pull my chair away for comfort. I'm invisible and exposed. My words establish my walls. My whole life I'm two people. I am I, and I am Her. I've been asked to pin down a moment. But do I care about my past? Why would I want to look behind when I'm hurtling forward so fast? I'm mostly scared I can't catch up with me. I am always almost out of time.

       A moment later, my inbox pinged with Addison's next email.

       I'm dropping the class.

       And that was it.
       Of course I never forgot her. When I heard that Addison had left Pratt after one semester, I was disappointed, but like everyone else on the faculty, I kept an eye on her career. I silently cheered when her self-portrait was accepted into the Whitney Biennial; I was fascinated by her prank Project #53. Then by next July, she was dead. A brilliant artist, all that potential, erased. It was heartbreaking and pointless.
       I'd been blocked trying to come up with my next book idea, and as I learned more about my former student, I couldn't shake the fact that Addison Stone's life had all the ingredients of a perfect novel. Ultimately, I have to credit Julie Jernigan's explosive Art & Artist magazine cover story "Who Broke Our Butterfly? The Last Days of Addison Stone" for kick-starting me to dig for a deeper truth--as it hinted that either one of two famous young men to whom she'd been linked romantically, Zachary Fratepietro and Lincoln Reed, might be culpable.
       Every time I read that single cryptic paragraph Addison had dashed off for my class, I wondered if in some way she'd been asking for me to find her all along.
       I decided to go looking. With a year off from teaching, I threw myself into my research. I taped hundreds of interviews from people whose lives were connected to Addison's. Her story took me from Sag Harbor to California, from Europe to Nepal, and of course to Peacedale, Rhode Island, where Addison spent her childhood. She began to obsess me. In every gallery and café, on every street corner it seemed there was another Addison doppelgänger.
       I kept thinking, ridiculously, that the closer I got to her past, the greater the chance I'd have of stealing a moment out of time with Addison herself--even if we were only brushing past each other on a city street. She was everywhere and nowhere.
       And as police reports emerged that both Lincoln and Zach were in lower Manhattan that night, and that neither of them had an alibi that would clear their presence at or near the time of Addison's death, I grew more curious, even suspicious. Both proved difficult to reach. Neither wanted to talk
       What did they have to hide?
       This question became my central mystery to solve.
       After months of sifting, compiling, editing, and transcribing thousands of hours of the voices that knew Addison best, this biography pulls back the curtain to reveal the truth as I see it. The acknowledgments that appear at the end of this book can't begin to do justice to the generous commitment of the many people involved--including those who wished to remain anonymous. I am also hugely grateful to the contributions of photographs and memorabilia, the visuals of Addison's world that allowed us such vital intimacy.

To her family, friends, fans, or the reader who is new to all that was Addison, I hope you find her here.

Adele Griffin


Chapter I
HOME AGAIN


JONAH LENOX: I guess you could call me Addison's first. We dated when we both lived in Peacedale, but I moved to Boulder, Colorado, the same summer that Addison moved to New York. She loved that city, the city that killed her. When they brought Addison's body back from New York to bury her in Rhode Island, I could almost hear her joking. "Lenox, can you believe it? Just when I thought I got out, they dragged me back again!"
       I'd flown in from Boulder the day before for the funeral. I went straight to our beach at Point Judith. To the spot we'd always picked, with a view out over the sandbar. I watched the sky and water grey on the horizon, and it looked so real and endless, and I knew. I even said it to myself. "She's free."

LUCY LIM: I'm Lucy. I'm--I mean, I was--Addy's best friend. I knew her since kindergarten. She should have been my roommate, my maid of honor, the godmother of my future kids. Instead she died. July twenty-eighth. The hottest day on record that year. The morning of her funeral, the heat still hadn't broken. Hotter than a shearer's armpit, my Grandmother Lim would have said. Nobody in their right mind would have come out their house to stand around scratching themselves in a hot church for a funeral. Or so I thought.
       But soon as Mom and me turned onto Columbia Street, we saw the cars. Hundreds of them lining the road all the way to the church doors, and more parked skew up the lawn and along the cemetery gates. Plus photographers, news crews, so many kids I'd never seen before in my life. They all stood silent, holding deep-violet irises, printouts of her art, that Interview elevator picture of her and Lincoln, the printouts of her paintings, candles, even teddy bears. And I remember thinking, Holy smokes, Addy! I wish you'd been here to see.

JONAH LENOX: I did some shots of Jameson in Sugarfoot's kitchen before the service. I didn't want to go. Addison was my girl. I didn't know the other Addison Stone, the one who the whole town was showing up for. But I put on a tie, even if it was a thousand degrees in the shade. I wore my purple stocking hat she'd given me. That hat--I'd run into a burning building to get that hat.

WILMA PLANO, mortician at the Allens-Plano Funeral Home and Crematorium: I've been preparing the deceased here in Peacedale for thirty-five years. I've readied old folks, children, sometimes teeny babies, bless their teeny baby hearts. Most everyone in my trade knows there's only one trick to this job: make it look like they're sleeping. But in all my years, I never saw such life in a dead girl's face. She had a glow. Like she was playing a prank on the world, like any minute she might just sit up and laugh. I couldn't shake the thought once it came in my head. Scared the daylights out of me, if you want to know the truth. I thought I couldn't be spooked by anything. Turns out I was wrong.

HAILEY REISS, reporter for The New York Times: I was assigned to cover Addison's Stone's funeral. It was a real scoop, because at that point, her death was clouded with rumors, with some fingers pointing to it as a final Zach Frat prank, other fingers pointing to a quarrel with Lincoln Reed and that whole love triangle. Accident, suicide--you name it, people were gossiping. There was plenty of facts-don't-add-up mystery around that night. So I wanted to see who turned up and who didn't: the friends the enemies, the general freak show . . . I wanted to get the money quote from Lincoln Reed--who never showed.
       Addison Stone was--and still is--hot print.
       My editor also wanted us to capture some images. Like maybe a shot of Lincoln looking guilty? Devastated? Or Carine Fratepietro hugging Addison's mom? Or that exotic giant Gil Cheba, all wasted and strung out? Or one of those Lutz brothers drinking lemonade on a country porch swing?
       The Times thought it was all our own bright idea to run the funeral as a style piece--but as soon as I got to the Sheraton, I saw the press. New York Post, Vanity Fair, New York, Daily Beast, Gawker, TMZ, People, Star, ArtRightNow. And I saw Julie Jernigan, who ended up writing that now-classic story for Art & Artist. So yeah, everyone. We were all vying for our place on Reddit. But they made us check our cameras. It seemed like every local cop was there only to enforce Addison's privacy for just one day. You'll never see any of those pictures, because they didn't let anyone take any.
       Addison's funeral was different from what I expected. Here we all were to cover it, the spectacle of celebrity death--too young, too beautiful, too talented, too soon--who wouldn't want to report that funeral?
       But you know what else? It was really fucking sad. Addison's people, they all loved this girl. You could feel it, too. The massive electric surge of mourning.

OFFICER SEAMUS RIORDAN, South Kingstown Police: I've been on the force fifteen years and never saw anything like this. We were called in, six squad cars, at about 11:15 a.m.--and we'd been briefed. Demonstration was brewing around a funeral for a girl who was some big deal. Nah, I didn't recognize her name. Jon Bon Jovi, LeBron James, now that's some famous folks. But plenty of other people must have known about this dead kid, because next thing we've got is a traffic jam off Columbia all the way to Peacedale First Congregational.
       Plus the crowd. Kids sitting on the roofs of cars. Kids stacking wreaths on fire hydrants and purple-chalking messages onto sidewalks and telephone poles. Kids wrapping trees in toilet paper.
       We had the pepper spray, the Tasers, all that. Any situation, it's best to be prepared. But then we came to realize it was just fans. Harmless. They'd been denied access into the church and just wanted to be part of something. Like the outdoor concert at our Johnnycake Festival over in Pawtucket is how I always describe it. We didn't need backup--and when it did turn violent, it was a family dispute at the reception, and none of us were there, anyway.
       I went and checked out her gravesite a few days later. Had to see it for myself, by myself. All the flowers were blooming in the summer sunshine. It was real pretty. You wanna know something? You could still feel that girl's spirit. You could still feel all that love around her.

CHARLIE STONE, brother: I'm younger than Addison by sixteen months. Her only sibling. For the record, I hate talking about my sister's funeral. But of course I remember every single thing about it. Mom and Dad and I were in the front pew.
Then our cousins, Maddy and Morgan; Aunt Jen and Uncle Len; Gam-Gam, who's my grandmother on Dad's side; and our Bristol grandparents, Gran and Pop O'Hare. I wanted to nuke the open casket idea. My parents were slightly insane on that point. They were so proud of Addison's looks. An open casket was the one thing Mom and Dad could agree on.
       Mom dressed Addison all wrong. I couldn't stop thinking how Addison would have been ripped that this was her last outfit. White button-down shirt and a long black skirt she used to wear for, like, choir recitals in ninth grade. Black booties that she hadn't even taken with her to New York. They'd been in the hall closet for two years, and then Mom's sending her to meet St. Peter in them? Jesus H. Christ.
       I kept my butt in the pew. I've got happier memories of my sister than her dead face on a lace pillow. It wasn't till I was alone that I saw through the open door all those other people. That's when I got it that Addison's funeral was big. Bigger than homecoming. And these kids were so respectful. Just sitting on the roofs of cars or spread out on blankets on the grass. I couldn't stop feeling their . . . presence, I guess. Like a humming on the walls of the church. Was this whole swoosh-swoosh-swoosh surround-sound group-worship heartbeat how it felt to be Addison? And I wondered if she could feel it then, too.

LUCY LIM: I looked at her. I had to. I needed to know that girl who was so wildly alive was really gone. I could still feel all those burning, smoking wires in her mind. So what struck me hardest was the calm in Addy's face. No more fear, no more panic. Her eyes closed and her eyelashes curled up like a doll's. The pink in her cheek and the shine in her hair. Nothing raggedy or burnt out. Just my own Addy enjoying one of her naps.

MAUREEN STONE, mother: I say it to myself. I am the mother of a child who has died. I'm in the club nobody wants to join. Lord knows, for months I couldn't even pull it through my brain. My daughter was gone. My daughter is dead. You can't know what it's like, all these years. You just can't know the feeling of being mother to a girl who you thought might die every single day--right up until the day she did.

EVE LIM, mother of Lucy: If you could have seen those girls together! Best friends! Lulu and Addy, Addy and Lulu, they called each other, always, always. Lucy was at Addison's house half the week, and Addison was with us the other half. Later, when the girls were in high school, we had Addison over more, on account of what was going on at her house.
       I'm a single parent myself, so I loved the company. Driving the girls to the Cineplex or Applebee's. Changing the radio, listening to them laughing all over themselves in the backseat. Good times! I know Addison turned into a different girl
from the Addy-and-Lulu days, but when I looked down at her face in the casket, I could hear her laugh ring out in my head. Her smile was sunshine. What a beauty. She'll be in my heart forever.

LUCY LIM: After the service, Mom and I were zombies. We'd been in three days of straight shock. And as we were sniffling our way to the reception in the church basement, that's when we realized a bunch of media types had sneaked in. Every
squirrel wanting their nut, and all of 'em asking questions about Addy--her sex life, her drug life, her mental state, her supposed past suicide attempts, and most especially, where was Zach Frat? Where was Lincoln Reed? I looked across the room and saw Addy's brother. Poor Charlie, this reporter was riding him like a dog. And I knew it, I was like, Aw, hell, Charlie's gonna lose it on this guy. He's gonna explode.


From the Hardcover edition.

Excerpted from The Unfinished Life of Addison Stone: A Novel by Adele Griffin
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

For fans of Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children, Girl, Interrupted, and A.S. King, National Book Award-finalist Adele Griffin tells the fully illustrated story of a brilliant young artist, her mysterious death, and the fandom that won't let her go.

From the moment she stepped foot in NYC, Addison Stone’s subversive street art made her someone to watch, and her violent drowning left her fans and critics craving to know more. I conducted interviews with those who knew her best—including close friends, family, teachers, mentors, art dealers, boyfriends, and critics—and retraced the tumultuous path of Addison's life. I hope I can shed new light on what really happened the night of July 28.
—Adele Griffin


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