"Five Little Bitches" chronicles the rise and fall of the all-woman band, Wet Leather. Each of the women is plagued by her own unique demons, but their devotion to music and the punk lifestyle keeps them pushing on. As the band progresses, they tour Canadian, American and European towns and cities and all the alleys, gutters, back stages, vans, hotel rooms, highways and airways in between. Part punk rock travelogue, "Five Little Bitches" is full-throttle grit-lit. The novel is a testimony to a generation of "grrrls" in revolt.
After extensive travel across Canada and the US, her first novel, Some Girls Do was published by Raincoast/Polestar books (2002).Teresa McWhirter grew up in Kimberley, in the east Kootenays of interior BC. She received a BA with a double major in English and Creative Writing from the University of Victoria.
Following an assortment of jobs including teaching English in Korea, driving an ice cream truck, and scaring children at a haunted house, she published Dirtbags (Anvil Press, 2007) and YA Skank (Lorimer, 2011).
During the past few years Teresa has toured Europe and North America with punk rock bands, gathering material for her new novel Five Little Bitches (Anvil, 2012)
Mixed feelings about this one. It started off strong, but then got boring. The book starts with the stories/details about the five women and how they became punks. They then create a punk band a la L-7 and go touring all over the world. The book has a great design and is almost zine-like. However, the story just gets old and I had a hard time remembering the back story of two of the women.
The dialogue is also really weird. They use a lot of really gross slang. Some parts of it were amusing, but sometimes I had a hard time believing that ANYONE actually talked like that. There were some things I really loved about this book, including some of the East Van setting, but in other ways, it was just sort of flat.
I've liked everything I've read by Theresa McWhirter and this is no exception. Great characters, gritty situations, and a pretty damn accurate portrayal of the love/hate relationship that band members often have with each other. The ending was more optimistic than her other books, but that was okay, since she refrained from making every character miraculously turn into a whole new, better person. I had a lot of fun reading this, it reminded me how much I like novels about punk rock.
Much grittier than what I normally read, so that was difficult, but still I appreciate the window into the lives of these women characters, each of whom is strong in her own way. The front lines of feminism can be almost anywhere.
A bit of a female Hardcore Logo but not as good. I think the book got stronger in the second half. I liked that it was set in Vancouver but I wished it had more music related content in it.