Hamann wrote
Anthropology of an American Girl, a semi-autobiographical coming-of-age story about Eveline Auerbach, a young woman growing up in Reagan-era America. The novel was first published by Vernacular Press in 2003. Hamann did not send the manuscript to agents or publishers until Vernacular closed in June 2007. The paperback version was released in June 2011. The book was re-published in a version edited by Cindy Spiegel of
Spiegel & Grau at
Random House. It was published in Australia by
Allen & Unwin, in Italy by Fandango Libri, and in the UK by
Constable & Robinson.
Library Journal called the novel "
Henry James meets the 21st Century," "intelligent and insightful." Also according to
Library Journal, "Eveline, or Evie, is not a stereotypical 'American Girl'; nor is the book a standard coming-of-age story."
The Providence Journal cited the novel for its "gorgeous detail and nuanced thought" and "poetically rendered, astute perceptions." It stated that "
Anthropology of an American Girl is an extraordinary debut, updating the 19th-century social-psychological novel of romance and manners. Like
Jane Austen,
George Eliot or
Edith Wharton, H.T. Hamann critiques her era and culture through the tale of a precocious young woman buffeted by the accidents, values and consequences of her age."
Anthropology was praised by publications with diverse demographics.
Ms. Magazine cited it for its "gorgeous language and brilliant observation," and
Romantic Times Book Club Magazine called it a "magnificently intense love story," awarding the novel its highest possible rating. The novel won a "Notable Fiction Award" from ''Writers' Notes
(2004); ForeWord Magazine'' named it a Book of the Year "Fiction Finalist" (2003). The novel received a starred review from
Publishers Weekly, which called the book "exquisitely rendered," and added, "If publishers could figure out a way to turn crack into a book, it’d read a lot like this."
O Magazine said that the novel is "a realistic, resonant, and universal story," adding that "Evie has a deadpan delivery Holden Caulfield might envy." The magazine also stated that "Hamann's depiction of time and place is stunningly accurate."
The Washington Post praised it as "a very respectable and serious descendant of the work of D.H. Lawrence," adding that Hamann had created "a carefully devised, coherent world, filled with opinions that need to be spoken—and heard." It also called the novel "A stern rebuke to chick lit everywhere," adding that the story "reminds us that all human lives are potentially sacred; that no lives should be judged and dismissed out of hand; that young women, though seen for eons as primarily just attractive objects, actually possess soul and will and sentience." According to
The Chicago Tribune, "Hamann has a hugely engaging voice and one that is rich with social and psychological insights." Respected book seller e-zine,
Shelf Awareness, said that
Anthropology is a "magnificent book," "incredibly intense and passionate," "romantic in the grand sense," "a rich, affecting experience," and "completely entrancing." ==
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