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Still Life with Tornado

A.S. King
Plot Summary

Still Life with Tornado

A.S. King

Fiction | Novel | YA | Published in 2016

Plot Summary
Still Life with Tornado is a young adult contemporary novel by A.S. King. First published in 2016 and the winner of the 2017 NAIBA Book of the Year, Still Life with Tornado follows a young girl having an identity crisis who struggles to cope with her parents’ marriage breakdown. The book received a generally positive response following publication. Although some argue that the protagonist suffers from a multiple personality disorder in the book, King denies this, claiming this is an element of magical realism. King is the author of many young adult contemporary novels.

Still Life with Tornado has a somewhat unreliable narrator. Sixteen-year-old Sarah struggles to separate fact from fiction. Something happened to her on a family trip to Mexico years ago, but she can’t remember what. Blocking out trauma, she spends a lot of time constructing a safe reality for herself. She is frequently visited by her ten-year-old younger self, who encourages her to remember what happened and deal with her feelings so she can move on. Readers should be aware that Still Life with Tornado flits between the past and the present, and also between truth and fiction.

Sarah loves art and is very talented. She hopes to attend art school one day. Her teachers, friends, and family have great ambitions for her. However, Sarah wakes up one day and can’t draw anymore. She is in art class, as usual, and her teacher is looking forward to seeing what she comes up with. The answer is nothing.



Focusing obsessively on the blank sheet of paper before her, Sarah feels like an empty page; she has nothing to give and nothing to share. Unsurprisingly, Sarah panics, because she has never felt uninspired before. Art comes easily to her. When she can’t draw anything, she leaves the class not planning to return.

Sarah replays that last class repeatedly in her mind. Her teacher, Miss Smith, said there is no such thing as an original idea. She then challenged the students to draw something. This is the moment when Sarah clams up. Normally, Sarah loves a challenge. She hasn’t worked out what is bothering her and blocking her creativity.

Sarah refuses to go back to school. Her mother despairs, but she doesn’t force her to return. Her father, on the other hand, thinks it is ridiculous; he makes Sarah feel stupid for skipping school. To escape everyone, Sarah wanders around town during the day. She feels detached from the people around her, and she doesn’t care about anything. Sarah doesn’t know that she needs help.



One day, Sarah hides out in an abandoned building, pretending she is back at school and everything is normal. However, her younger self appears and demands her attention. She asks present-day Sarah if she remembers their holiday to Mexico. Sarah does; she reflects on it for some time. She wiles away the hours, dreaming about tropical fish and hot sunshine.

When Sarah gets home, she remembers that she didn’t play with tropical fish in Mexico. She made up those memories. Sarah exaggerates a lot, and she often lies to people. She hates herself for being this way; she doesn’t understand why she isn’t normal. This is Sarah’s first step to uncovering the truth behind her creative block.

The next day, Sarah visits an art gallery and a homeless man nearby. Her younger self shadows her the whole time, reminding her to think about Mexico. Sarah ignores her because she doesn’t want to think about it. She is hiding from her own memories. As the day wears on, Sarah reflects on what might be happening at school, but she isn’t inclined to go back. Instead, she deletes her social media accounts. She doesn’t have many friends, anyway, and so no one notices.



The week drags on and Sarah’s parents fight constantly. Her mother drinks and her father picks arguments with them both. Sarah wishes she could turn back time to fix everything. If only she hadn’t frozen in art class, everything might be okay. Her younger self, however, knows this isn’t true, even if present Sarah won’t listen to her.

Young Sarah tells present Sarah to phone their older brother, Bruce. He will know what to do. Sarah calls him, and he is ecstatic to hear from her. He will come to visit her because he worries about her. He doesn’t want her living at home anymore. Sarah doesn’t understand why, but she will soon find out.

When Bruce arrives, he tells Sarah that their father abused him. Their father hospitalized Bruce on several occasions, which is why Bruce ran away. He now campaigns for child welfare. Sarah remembers Mexico was the last family holiday because their father exploded and seriously hurt Bruce. Their mother refused to go on holiday again.



Bruce shows Sarah that it is possible to recover from trauma. First, she must accept that her childhood was difficult and that she has an abusive father. It is nothing to be embarrassed about, and she must face her feelings. Bruce will help her every step of the way. She decides to get help and her past self disappears. Before long, she is painting again.

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