Breakout

Breakout

by Paul Fleischman

Narrated by Richard Harries, Susan Spain

Unabridged — 3 hours, 23 minutes

Breakout

Breakout

by Paul Fleischman

Narrated by Richard Harries, Susan Spain

Unabridged — 3 hours, 23 minutes

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Overview

17-year-old Del is in a hurry to leave Los Angeles. But on the day of her escape, she's stopped short-by a day-long traffic jam. Eight years later, it's opening night of her one woman show about a day spent in gridlock. Could the show reveal that a day wasted in traffic is anything but? Breakout is the latest innovative work of Paul Fleischman. His other celebrated books include Joyful Noise: Poems for Two Voices, which is a Newbery Medal Winner and winner of the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award for Fiction/Poetry.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

"The author explores the way art allows people to re-examine their lives, in this chronicle of a young woman who experiences an emotional breakthrough while stranded among strangers on the San Diego Freeway, and its contribution to her work onstage," PW said. Ages 12-up. (Feb.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

School Library Journal

Gr 10 Up-An ambitious and entertaining novel told in concurrent narratives. Del is a bright, self-possessed teen who carefully plans her escape from home, but her first day of "freedom" is spent in a colossal Los Angeles traffic jam. Readers see how her experiences and impressions become fodder for her art via a series of monologues she delivers as an adult performance artist. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Life begets art begets life: "It's fiction. Meaning autobiography seen through weird, wavy glass." So says playwright/performer Elena Franco to an interviewer minutes before her one-woman play Breakout is to premiere. That statement becomes the key to understanding this richly layered musing on the forging of identity. Cut from the interview to a scene some years earlier: 17-year-old Del has just faked her own death in order to escape her deadening life with the latest in a series of foster parents; she is recklessly optimistic, until a mammoth, LA-sized traffic jam brings her literally screeching to a halt. From these beginnings, the text moves back and forth from Elena's play to Del's enforced idleness, the former finding its seeds in the latter in an acutely artful comment on the parallels between the creation of art and identity. Fleischman presents in Del a character with no identity, a multiracial orphan whose gift for mimicry becomes first a desperate search for protective coloration, which becomes, in the end, a defiant embrace of her own uniqueness. A stunning tour de force. (Fiction. YA)

From the Publisher

"Fleischman's artful structure, distinctive voices, and carefully chosen details make this a splendid choice for teens on the verge of a breakout of their own."
School Library Journal, starred review

"A stunning tour de force."
Kirkus Reviews, starred review

Product Details

BN ID: 2940170702350
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 09/11/2009
Edition description: Unabridged
Age Range: 12 - 17 Years

Read an Excerpt

From Chapter One

The car coughed all the way down the freeway entrance, gargled raucously with each change of gear, then shivered like a fever patient when Del tried to take it above sixty. The seat springs were shot, leaving her butt below sea level and her knees in the clouds. The right outside mirror had been lost somewhere on life's journey. The wheels pulled strongly to the left. An otherworldly whine issued from the air vents. The "Service Engine Soon" light flickered on, then went out — a messenger shot in the back. It was an '83 Datsun, born before CD players, power locks, air bags. On the plus side, the worn leather steering-wheel cover felt homey. And the car was hers.

She let out a scream of joy. The mother of two in the Volvo beside her gave her a glance and slid over two lanes. Del could barely believe everything had gone smoothly. In her mind she played the breakout scene from Armed and Dangerous, the old black-and-white prison movie they'd had at the house in Glendale: Mack plumping up the dummy on his bed, Slim lifting the floorboards to reveal the tunnel, then Jake, the leader, checking his watch, nodding to the others, and muttering, "I been waitin' for this a long time." She said the words aloud in his Brooklyn accent, saw him wiping his forehead and spitting on the floor, then gave the car more gas and shouted out his next line: "Let's bust outta this pukehole!" She drew the line out, then uncorked it again even louder, and again, then a fourth time, spraying it like champagne at the cars around her, at the schoolgirls on the overpass, at the man collecting litter, at the yellow city bus, at the beaming couple on the billboard, at the palm trees and the skyscrapers and the hills in the distance — at all of L.A.

It was July and already hot at eight-fifteen. For three days a Santa Ana wind had been blowing, a furnace door left open. The heat turned up the volume on all her feelings: jubilation, fear, and an eerie sense of weightlessness, as if she were an astronaut free-floating in space — one who's just cut her own cord.

She stole a glance at the temperature controls but couldn't find the air-conditioning switch. With her eyes on the road, she sent her right hand clambering blindly over the console like an elephant trunk, starting the rear wiper, the rear defrost, the warning lights. Then it came to her that the ponytailed seller had grinned when he'd drawled "externally sourced" in reply to her question about A/C. She'd bought his answer without comment at the time. Suddenly, his meaning was clear. She grabbed the wobbly handle and rolled down the window.

"Jerk," she snapped.

Tilting her head, she bathed in the air flow, trying to wash out the knowledge that her inexperience had been so visible. She felt as if she'd walked down Wilshire in her underwear. Could everybody see that she was barely seventeen, desperate, and didn't know brake fluid from fudge syrup? "Farther down the line," she warned the man out loud, her standard karmic threat. Then she remembered. He was part of the past. He'd sold the car to Del. But Del was done with. She was Elena now. Elena Franco.

She needed music, turned on the radio, and hunted for KLOS. A red Miata blared at her. She'd drifted out of her lane. She jumped back to the right, approached the San Diego Freeway, and repeated her route out loud: "Santa Monica Freeway east. Follow signs for Interstate 10. Ten all the way to Phoenix. Then north on whatever-it-is." Then she added, "And no mess-ups." Then, "Piece of cake." She felt for the map, making sure it was there on the passenger seat underneath her stuffed collie. "And Lassie knows the way," she added. Del gave the dog a pat. She imagined herself leaving the gray part of the map and entering the olive, then the dark green, could taste the coolness in the air there, revivifying as a waterfall. She looked at the tree-shaped air freshener, formerly pine-scented, formerly bright green, that had come with the car at no extra charge.

"Gonna take you back home," she promised it. "Back to the mountains."

From out of nowhere, in a split-second shiver, she sensed that her mother was somewhere in L.A. Then the thought was behind her, like a car speeding past.

"Elena?"

"That's me."

"I'm Carla. Here for the interview. Sorry I'm late. I'll be quick."

"That's good, 'cause the curtain goes up in forty-five minutes and I need half an hour all alone first. Hope you don't mind me doing my makeup. What's the name of your paper?"

"Kaleidoscope. Arts and events with a little muckraking on the side. OK if I record us?"

"Go for it. Just be sure to take the 'ums' out of my quotes. And no fragments or run-ons, you know? Make it read like English. And be sure to describe the dressing room as 'opulent' and crammed with bouquets. Just kidding."

"OK. Recording. The play's called Breakout. A one-woman show, written and performed by Elena Franco. And this is the Denver premiere, right?"

"Denver, North America, the universe. This is it. All zeroes on the odometer."

"Wow. Are you nervous?"

"Thanks for reminding me. Of course I'm nervous! I hate rejection, in all its forms. Especially in the form of people not attending my plays, taking phone calls while they're attending my plays, and letting their seats bang when they leave in the middle of my plays."

"From what the theater faxed me, the show's about a traffic jam in Los Angeles. Is that where you live?"

"I did till high school, but I'm in Boulder now."

"How old are you?"

"Twenty-five. Could you hand me that mascara?"

"How many plays have you written?"

"This is number nine. The third one I've gotten produced. Now if I could only get a few reviews."

"I'll be doing that."

"Cool. And what form of payment do you prefer when being bribed?"

"One of those Hershey kisses would probably do the job."

"Here, take twenty."

"So apparently there's a lot about cars in the play. Are you into cars?"

"Into cars? I hate cars. The first one I owned was this ancient Datsun that had an asthma attack every time it went uphill. So of course I took it to the mountains, and I eventually ended up working at this motel in Taos, where of course it died on me in a couple of weeks. My initiation into the wonderful world of automobiles. They're like kids, only more expensive. You gotta bathe 'em and buy 'em stuff and take 'em to the emergency room and worry about people stealing 'em. I've already got a child for all that. A daughter who's my one and only and tells me I'm hers. No car ever said that to me."

"Are you married?"

"Single. Probably because I'm insanely picky about who I'd let help raise my girl. And I'm probably too much of a control freak for anyone to put up with anyway."

"Yeah?"

"Yeah. I write all my own copy for theater programs and try to edit everyone else's. I boss the lighting and set people around. I really like getting what I want, you know? When I wanted a baby, I got myself pregnant. With boyfriends, I'm always getting in trouble telling 'em where to park and what to order in restaurants. You're not going to print this, right?"

"So are any of the characters in the show based on you?"

"Any of 'em? All of 'em!"

"It's autobiography?"

"It's fiction. Meaning autobiography seen through weird, wavy glass. I mean, I'm not comically helpless like the new father in the show, and I sure don't drive a Lincoln Continental, but I know about trying to mix work and parenting, what it's like when I'm trying to type with one hand and hold a thermometer in my daughter's mouth with the other."

"So where did this bunch of characters come from? From a certain time in your life?"

"Funny you should ask. I think I'll leave that one alone. What do you think of the earrings? Too big? They look like freaking wind chimes."

"I like 'em."

"Yeah?"

"Yeah."

"OK. They're in. Anyway. Back to your question. A partial answer. The play mainly comes from when I was younger. But all that stuff's seen through my eyes now, with everything that's happened since, especially this breakthrough I had a year ago. It's like those paintings Monet did of the same haystack at different times. The hay's yellow in one, then orange, then purple. You keep getting older and changing, and the scenes you look back on change because of that. I was pretty angry and impossible in high school. But in the show there's an argument between a parent and a teenager, and when I was writing it, suddenly it hit me that I was siding with the mother now and making fun of my old impossible self. You can't step into the same river twice. Or the same memory, you know?"

"So why a trafflc jam? It seems like such a strange subject to pick."

"That was part of the lure. A misshapen, unwanted subject that actually had a lot going for it. And in L.A. it's not strange — it's daily life. One summer I was in a killer jam like this one. The kind you never forget. The play's sort of based on that, and on issues from back then that I'm still working on. But altered, disguised, given to different characters. Changed. From life into art. Like in the play, I changed the jam to winter, to keep the drivers in their cars longer, so I could get into their little worlds and build up to the scene when they finally get out and start interacting with each other. That's what writers do."

"Do you think you'll ever do the show in L.A.?"

"Man, what are you, a massage therapist? You know just where it hurts. Short answer: No. Off-the-record answer, just for you: The things I tell about myself in the show are all true, except that I don't actually have an agent in L.A. — or any agent, period — and I didn't fly out there last year. I've never actually gone back since I left. And never wanted to. So, no. It's not a place I'd be comfortable performing. End of interview, OK? Whew. That got my mind off the jitters. So tell me, was anybody milling around on the sidewalk? The first play I ever did, the theater sat eighty, two people showed up. And they sat on opposite sides. Two bowling pins. I swear I went cross-eyed. One laughed, the other didn't. To bring in a crowd, theaters should hire people to mill around on the sidewalk, don't you think? Like duck decoys. It works with birds, right? Whoa. It's seven-thirty. Get me a copy of the story, OK? Sorry to shoo you out."

"Break a leg."

"How 'bout 'axle.'"

"Cute."

"Could you say it? For luck?"

"Break an axle."

"Thanks."

Copyright © 2003 by Paul Fleischman

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