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Pustolovine Fleša Džeksona

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Smešten u gradiću Menvilu, država Njujork, roman Pustolovine Fleša Džeksona je priča o muškarači Hali Bombauer i njenim ambicijama da razbi­je ograničenja svog malograđanskog života. Saučesnički i duhovito, roman govori o njenom ulasku u svet koji, prema njenim rečima, nije stvoren wpo meri devojaka", i njenim pokušajima da se u taj svet uklopi bez odustajanja od svoje nezavisnosti.

Živeći živopisnim i uzbudljivim imaginarnim životom u koji ju je uveo njen pokojni otac, koji joj je, takođe, dodelio i nadimak „Fleš Džekson", Hali Bombauer se, ispunjena slutnjama, suočava s letom u kome navršava sedamnaest godina. Lutajući okolnim padinama i šumom na svom voljenom konju Bratu, ona se sve više udaljava od svog uspavanog rodnog grada i ultraoprezne Majke, koja je, nakon muževljeve smrti, ostala duboko uko­renjena u prošlosti.

Ali, kada jednog dana Hali propadne kroz truli krov starog ambara, biva osuđena da pasje dane leta provodi vezana za krevet, s nogom u gipsu, zarobljena u kući sa svojom Majkom, i da podnosi posete svoje avetinjske, nerazumljive Bake, razmišlja o greškama koje je počinila zahvaljujući svojoj impulsivnosti i čežnjivo mašta o avanturi. Međutim, godina koja sledi će, zapravo, promeniti ne samo njen, već i živote njenih najbližih. Halino „zato­čeništvo*' će njenoj Čudnoj Baki konačno pružiti priliku da upozna svoju unuku i prenese joj neke od misterioznih i mističnih veština koje samo ona poznaje. Shvatajući ko je njena Baka i čemu je sve može naučiti, i sama Hali se menja - od muškarače nevoljne da prihvati svoju ženstvenost, do neobične i snažne žene.

Protkan slikovitošću i lirikom, dodirnut nežnim pramenom mističnog realizma, koji je postao zaštitni znak Vilijema Kovalskog, roman Pustolovine Fleša DŽeksona je dirljiva i urnebesna priča o samospoznaji i iskupljujućim silama ljubavi.

268 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2003

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About the author

William Kowalski

35 books76 followers

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5 stars
73 (21%)
4 stars
122 (36%)
3 stars
95 (28%)
2 stars
33 (9%)
1 star
10 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews
Profile Image for Sharon.
165 reviews12 followers
June 18, 2008
Kowalski characters are people that I like spending time with. The review for Library Journal called this one "not so much a coming-of-age as a coming-of-gender story." The Bombauer women are witches--well, at least grandma is--mom's taking a break from all that eye-of-newt stuff, and Haley's never shown much interest in the family business. But after a nasty fall leaves her with a summer of recuperation and limited mobility, she starts playing around a bit with spells. Mom's smart enough to know that what Haley needs is a teacher, so grandma steps in to teach Haley the healing arts (and a bit more...)

Profile Image for Hagar.
4 reviews
February 8, 2022
A great book have a lot of humanitarian meanings which's absent now from our world and modern life's mindset. Haley,17 years old girl ,who taught me how to accept myself,and how to have self-complacent , also to be independent . I also, liked the feminist expression in the book, especially when it came from a man. I felt it very cute to mix German with English . I guess the novel is tackling the theme of modern world and natural world .
Profile Image for Jo Anne.
946 reviews10 followers
September 13, 2018
I had a hard time with this book since I hated it, then liked it, then hated it some more...Really, it was the character of "Flash" I had issues with. Flash Jackson is the nickname of 16 year old Haley Bombauer. Her father called her that when they would play "Stuntmen" together.
She's a tomboy, a smartmouth, a lonely girl who is restless and not in tune with the rest of the world. Her father is dead; killed in an accident of his own making.
On the day before she turns 17, she's on the roof of her family's old barn when she falls through a rotted spot and falls to the ground, breaking her leg in 3 places. It's the beginning of summer and there will be no running wild with a cast up to her thigh and crutches.
Why I didn't like Haley--I just don't care for characters who always have a smart or rude or sarcastic answer for everything. She was constantly popping off to her mother, who had shut down when her husband died. Haley had no sympathy for her.
The story is rather odd. The first part of the book gives the reader background for the main characters. Then an odd little fact sneaks in--Haley might be a witch, just like her grandmother. In the second part of the book, Haley has decided to go live with her odd grandmother, who lives deep in the woods in a house the size of a garden shed with no modern amenities. There she learns herb and healing craft and learns to listen to nature. The story gets even odder when she decides her smelly, rotting clothes are of no use and discards them, going around with only a piece of twine tied around her waist that holds a knife and a pair of scissors. Now the story gets a mystical "I talk to nature" feel to it.

I'm not going to go on about the plot. It has many "huh" moments but also Haley DOES mature. Which is why I decided I finally liked her and would finish reading. I don't know if this is a Young Adult book (no big deal I guess since anyone can read it) but I did feel out of reality while inside the story.
Profile Image for Nemanja.
87 reviews23 followers
August 12, 2021
3,5✨
Odrastanje, spoznaja... Sve su to neke krupne reči kojima su nam stariji govorili, mada nikada nismo do kraja znali šta tačno one znače, sve dok se iznenada one nisu dogodile, a da toga nismo ni bili svesni.
Pustolovine Fleša Džeksona je delo koje malo teže možete staviti unutar jednog žanra. Priča koja deluje kao "coming of age" u drugoj polovini prelazi u priču o magiji i misticizmu i onda se ponovo vraća u svet realizma.
U malom gradiću 17ogodišnja muškarača Hali poznatija kao Fleš Džekson (mada je ona jedina koja sebe tako naziva) povređuje nogu i prinuđena da narednih mesec dana provede u okolini svoje kuće okružena plejadom zanimljiv karaktetima. Ali nakon tragedije u kojoj umire njen prijatelj Frenk, mladić u kasnim 20im koji boluje od šizofrenije, Hali odlučuje da napusti dom, oporavi se od bola i počne da uči o sebi i odlučuje da se preseli kod svoje babe, veštice koja živi gorštačkim zivotom unutar mističnih šuma koje plene nekom energijom.
U šumi provodi mesece učeći "magiju" mada bolje reći prirodnu medicinu i način na koji postaje bliža prirodi. Spletom okolnosti ostaje trudna sa mladićem iz grada i nakon duže unutrašnje borbe odlučuje da prihvati to dete, čime konačno prihvata svoju žensku stranu.
Roman koji je paralno roman o odrastanju i prihvatanju sebe, predstavlja priču o devojci koje oseća strah i mržnju prema suprotnom rodu, plašeći se da će tako postati potlačena i da će izgubiti svoje ja. U potrazi za sobom i svojom prirodom Hali počinje da odrasta i uči. Suočava se sa sobom i počinje da sazreva u biće koje ona ustvari jeste, jedna snaža nezavisna žena i majka.
Ceo koncept je u početku delovao kao priča o odrastanju, sa naznakama da će boravak kod babe imati elemente hodočašća-spoznaje, ali je priča otišla u skroz drugi pravac koji nisam mogao najbolje da u početku pratim da bi se priča rezultira junakinjinim povratkom u civilizaciju i otpočinjanja novog života.
675 reviews1 follower
November 2, 2025
Strange - witchcraft, etc. Interesting Read
Set in William Kowalski's signature town of Mannville, New York, The Adventures of Flash Jackson is the story of tomboyish Haley Bombauer and her ambition to bust out of the confines of her smalltown upbringing. With compassion and humor, the novel tells of her emergence into a world that, in her words, "was not designed with girls in mind," and her efforts to find a way to fit in without having to give up her beloved independence.

Introduced to a vivid and exciting imaginary life by her now-dead father, who bestowed upon her the nickname "Flash Jackson," Haley Bombauer confronts the summer of her seventeenth year with glorious anticipation. She envisions herself roaming the surrounding hillsides and forests on her beloved horse, Brother, venturing farther and farther away from her sleepy hometown and her ultracautious mother, who since the death of her husband has remained rooted firmly in the past.

But when Haley falls through the rotted roof of the barn, she is destined to spend the dog days of summer in a thigh-high cast, stuck at home with her mother, enduring visits from her spooky, unintelligible grandmother, pondering the error of her impulsive ways, and dreaming longingly of adventure. The year that follows will, in fact, transform not only her life but also the lives of those closest to her. Haley's "imprisonment" affords her peculiar grandmother the chance to see finally what the girl is made of-and to pass along some of the mysterious and mystical arts that only she remembers. As Haley comes to understand just who her grandmother is, and what the old woman can teach her, she is transformed-from a tomboy reluctant to accept her femininity to an extraordinary, powerful woman.
5 reviews
February 3, 2025
I loved this book. Recently I've been fortunate enough to have some downtime to occupy myself with, and I decided to start reading again instead of doomscrolling as per usual. I picked this book up out of my collection without remembering that I'd read it before once, but it must have been many years prior; I only remembered bits and pieces just before they happened.

I have to say, the second time was even more satisfying. Contrary to some of the reviews here, as the reader I loved Haley as both a character and my narrator; she's smart, clever, witty, adventurous, and surrounded by love, though she doesn't fully understand this at the book's inception. She's honest with us when she thinks or does something she shouldn't. And though no one in her little town of Mannville seems to know quite what to make of a girl like her, she's happy there and I enjoyed that this coming-of-age story wasn't the pedestrian sort, about going to the big city and coming home.

It's a credit to Kowalski's writing ability that the voice of his character is felt so well in every page. The book had me smiling, laughing to myself, and happily turning pages; it's an easy book to read and hard to want to put down, though I'd say the stakes are not anywhere near as high as you might find in standard YA fare.

I'd recommend this book to anyone who might be seeking something perhaps a little lighter than your standard literary fare, but still well-crafted and with a good story to tell. I know I'd be happy to pick it up again when I need a bit of magic in my life.
314 reviews1 follower
May 31, 2024
Dit is een fijn boek als je bijvoorbeeld even moet rusten maar niet kunt slapen. Ik denk dat het een jeugdroman is, en zeker voor een boek dat twintig jaar geleden is verschenen, heeft het een origineel thema. Het gaat over een meisje van zeventien, eigenzinnig en ondernemend, dat vast zit in een dorpje met haar zeurende moeder. Ze wil niet in het keurslijf van meisjes en vrouwen en gaande het verhaal wordt duidelijk dat haar grootmoeder een wijze oude vrouw is die in haar eentje in de bossen leeft en beschikt over heksachtige gaven. Het meisje vindt door haar verblijf bij grootmoeder in het bos haar eigen krachten, en ook de kracht om het leven als vrouw aan te vatten in het vertrouwen dat ze ook als vrouw onafhankelijk kan zijn en haar eigenheid niet hoeft op te geven. Een mooie moraal dus. Maar het is minder zoetig dan het nu klinkt, dank zij de nuchtere, eigenwijze vertelstem.
11 reviews1 follower
January 14, 2021
I was given this book when I was a little too young to fully grasp all of the concepts and naturally I dove in and read this book MANY times. My tattered copy of The Adventures of Flash Jackson sat right beside my bed for years and every once in a while I’d open it up and slip right back in to this lovely story. It was the first story I’d ever read where the main character was a girl who wasn’t afraid to be herself and who was not bound by societal norms. Fantastic book!
Profile Image for Stacy.
184 reviews24 followers
August 24, 2017
I am not sure what to make of this book and I'm not sure that William Kowalski knew what he was writing. I very much enjoyed his two previous books and this book is written with the same kind of colorful character descriptions. I enjoyed reading this book but it took a left turn and just kept on going and then it was over.
Profile Image for Bamboozlepig.
865 reviews5 followers
March 5, 2019
Wandering plot, annoyingly snarky child character, sex that might or might not be a sexual assault, plot devices that are introduced and then forgotten, plenty about herbs and witches and living natural, a plane crash resulting in two dead dudes, and snarky child character has a baby that's the result of the maybe-rape. DNF'd because holy hell it was a hot mess.
67 reviews2 followers
January 20, 2019
Starts off well but then sort of loses its way.
Profile Image for Kerry Clair.
1,242 reviews15 followers
October 10, 2024
I loved this book. Wanted it to go on and on. Was sad when it ended. Great story, great characters, great storytelling. Good read for sure.
874 reviews4 followers
October 29, 2025
A kind of coming of age story mixed with something either supernatural or magical realism and decidedly weird, this book was just "ok" .
57 reviews2 followers
June 10, 2015
"I see so many people around here just going through the motions, like. They don't care what goes on in other parts of the world. They don't care about anything, in fact. They just want to get through their day with nothing out of the ordinary happening. That's a good day for them- a day when everything happens exactly the way it's supposed to, and they don't have to learn anything new"

I was sorting out my bookshelf the other day, and my eyes fell upon the hardcover edition of Kowalski's The Adventures of Flash Jackson . I figured since this book is the first book I had ever bought with my own money, the first book I ever owned, it deserves its own review. So without further ado, here is my review of the book- or what I remember of it, at least (because I read it years ago) I suppose I could just reread it, but seeing as I have gazillions of unread books on my shelf, I won't.

"That's life. You can work and work to get to the top but you never know when everything is going to collapse under you"

The main character of this novel is Haley. She is, as they say, something . She's witty, sarcastic, bad-ass, a feminist, and the i-won't-tolerate-any-of-your-bullshit kind of girl. In short, she's everything I love in a character. It is pretty clear that she doesn't feel as comfortable in her skin as she wants herself (and the reader) to think she does. Aside from her, we have her British neighbour, her mother, her witch of a grandmother (get it?), her half-loony friend, and a love interest (if one might call him that). The characters (including Haley) are nicely written, if a little cliche.

"Fear is a useless emotion, one that will map your life out for you if you let it"

The novel is set in the country, which is a place I am familiar with. The depiction of the country lifestyle is very real and makes it feel like one of those places I wouldn't mind visiting once in a blue moon.

"I don't give two craps in the woods what anyone thinks of me, whether it's ill or good or whatever"

The plot is just basically Haley's journey of self-realization and how she learns to accept herself for who she is. The first half of the book is way better than the second half of the book. The first half is a solid three stars. On the other hand, the second half is kind of boring and just plain. The ending is very.....corny.

"Sometimes a person just needs to run off for a while, when things get to be too much"

All in all, this book shows that Kowalski does have a lot of potential, and he is a nice enough writer. But I would only read another book by him provided it has a strong plot.
Profile Image for Erika Mager.
Author 1 book10 followers
June 22, 2012
Ein Mann schreibt ein ausgesprochenes Frauenbuch und nennt es "The Adventures of Flash Jackson". Ich will nicht wissen, wie viele Männer kurz vor der Mitte aufgegeben haben.
Für die deutsche Übersetzung wurde der Titel "Sommer auf der Schattenseite" gewählt, was schon weniger Assoziationen auf ein Männer-Action-Buch weckt.
Davon abgesehen: ein schönes Buch. Ein Mädchen kann sich nicht in die normale Mädchenrolle einfügen, fühlt sich eher als Junge, erträumt sich eine männliche Identität als Stuntman und lässt sich auch von Menschen aus ihrem Umfeld Flash Jackson nennen. Soviel zur Vorgeschichte, denn das Buch beginnt ausgerechnet, als die 17jährige Haley, so ihr eigentlicher Name, durch's Scheunendach stürzt und sich einen so komplizierten Beinbruch zuzieht, dass sie einen ganzen Sommer mehr oder weniger zur Untätigkeit verurteilt ist. Auf die Weise hat sie Zeit, sich mit sich, ihrer Weiblichkeit und ihrer gerade entdeckten Begabung als "Hexe" auseinanderzusetzen. Sie sieht die Tode dreier Menschen voraus und entdeckt, dass auch ihre Mutter und ihre Großmutter solche besonderen Fähigkeiten haben.
Sie beschließt, die Schule abzubrechen und zu ihrer Großmutter, die als Heilerin und Hexer mitten im Wald lebt, zu ziehen und sich in der Kunst des Heilens und "durch den Schleier sehen", wie sie dir Kunst des Hellsehens nennt, richtig zu lernen.
Eine harte Lehre, wie sich herausstellt. Sie verändert sich - körperlich und seelisch. Zum Schluss nimmt sie ihre ganz besondere Weiblichkeit an.
Ein etwas übersinnliches und doch ganz bodenständiges Buch. Mir hat es gut gefallen.
Profile Image for Dianne.
78 reviews
June 28, 2025
I like quirky. This book had that. But it also had a boatload of cliches and I was ALWAYS conscious that I was reading a man writing from a girl/woman's POV. It felt forced.

For 160 pages or so I couldn't tell what year (or approx. yr) this book was set in. It seemed to be fairly contemporary yet the 17 year old main character uses many references to 1950s celebrities (Nat King Cole and Hopalong Cassidy for example). Turns out it begins in approx. 1998.

On the surface the proper neighbor Miz Powell comes across as a way too familiar stereotype of certain type of British dowager right down to the pinky-crooking when sipping tea. She also meets the criteria of typical adult who understands the oddball main character when her parent does not.Turns out the proper outer appearance hides an eccentric adventuress inside (a triple cliched character). bleh.

The great climax in the woods seemed completely out of left field to me and the reactions to it totally unbelievable. The "Adam" character is a stick man.

The "Lilith" thread that explains the main character's snake phobia was bunk.

I was mystified by the main character's promise to give the late Frankie his Theater of the Human Spirit and then the casual dropping of that issue by the close of the book because she's pregnant and can only do one thing at a time.

HUH?
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Maria.
384 reviews3 followers
February 12, 2016
What a strange little book. Its been on my shelf for years and now that I've read it I'm not sure how I feel about it. The ideas on the force of women, their personal magic and the way that a woman can be all that she can be are values I try to live by anyway and I loved reading about them in a a fictional context. Maybe it was the fact that it was all written in the first person and so dragged on a little. I enjoy reading novels with multi-faceted characters and this book is based on the opinions and thoughts of a seventeen plus year old and I found this a little tedious at times. Despite this it did make me think about our roles as women, alternative healing and how we live our lives. I love a book that makes me think.
Profile Image for Sunflower.
1,155 reviews8 followers
August 11, 2008
From "I'm not a young lady. My name is Flash Jackson, and I'm a stuntman trapped in a female body" I thought that this heroine sounded interesting.
The two halves of the book could almost be different stories, and by the end of the tale Flash has undergone some major changes. The characters are well drawn and believable, and apart from some minor annoyances (one glaringly untrue medical statement,the mystery of her tampon supply while living a subsistence existence, and the way Haley speaks to her mother) it was enjoyable entertainment. 3.5 stars.
Profile Image for Hilary.
225 reviews36 followers
July 17, 2011
A magical book literally; what seems to start out as a small-town coming of age story is transformed midway into an something far deeper and older as the protagonist discovers that her presumed grandmother is, among other things, a great deal older than she had ever imagined, and that she herself has a heritage she could never have suspected. Enthralling enough that I twice missed my tube stop whilst reading it.
Profile Image for Criss.
262 reviews
April 1, 2014
Who wrote the blurb for this book? Did they even read it? The titular Flash Jackson is the alter ego for Haley an erstwhile 17 year old female who begins her journey of self discovery by falling through the barn roof. She is profane, refuses to behave as a typical girl, has a crazy-most-likely-witch of a grandmother who lives in the woods and a mother who is in deep denial.

This is not a book that reveals itself all at once, but one that unfolds slowly and with much purpose.
Profile Image for Karen.
76 reviews
June 19, 2010
this book is not even remotely what you would think from the title. It's about a girl with an independent spirit, growing up and her "adventures." Feminist, independent thinker, a bit of old/new age medicine, shamanism. Flash Jackson is a nickname her father gave her. I LOVED THIS BOOK.
Profile Image for Anita.
165 reviews6 followers
September 9, 2011
An odd book that started out quite normally, but turned into a bit of a mystical fantasy in the forest. I like Kowalski's writing - this is the fourth of his books that I've read - and I will continue to read any of his books I can get my hands on.
1 review5 followers
Currently reading
July 20, 2009
a secret life in our mind and person
Profile Image for Bella.
66 reviews16 followers
September 22, 2009
This book is a little lame and cheesy but enjoyable. It's nice to be swept away with the trash once in a while
Profile Image for Karen.
546 reviews6 followers
November 19, 2009
Fine, somewhat amusing story of a young woman's coming of age through various trials. Good narration if you do BOT's. Slow start...hold on.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews

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