Literature

Animal

Animal: A Novel: Taddeo, Lisa: 9781982122126: Amazon.com: Books

I recently finished reading Animal by Lisa Taddeo. I wasn’t sure I would like it but I ended up thinking it was an amazing book. I’m pretty sure, though, that many of you won’t like it and, in fact, won’t get past the first 20 pages. For those who do, it’s an interesting and propulsive novel that races to its end and that some might find erotic.

The novel focuses on our narrator, Joan, who is fleeing New York after having watched her married lover, Vic, shoot himself while she was out to dinner with his replacement. “If someone asked me to describe myself in a single word, depraved is the one I would use.”, Joan tells us. Joan is addicted to love and its analogues — in particular, the adoration of men who happen to be married to someone else.

Joan’s affair with Vic is expedient. He is her boss at an ad agency and he mentors, promotes, beds, spoils and stalks her after she stops having sex with him. She found the affair expedient. “At a certain point, I began to rely on Vic for everything,” she admits. “At first I enjoyed all the praise and then I started to feel like I deserved everything I got, that he had nothing to do with it.”

Joan heads to California, stopping off in Texas to have sex with a man there. “Along the drive I had been wanting to sleep with a real cowboy, someone without social media,” she explains.

She rents a house in Topanga Canyon on a large piece of property that is also home to a well-known rapper, a hot guy in a yurt, and a wealthy older man who has recently lost his wife. Once unpacked, she almost immediately runs into the person she went there looking for—a young woman named Alice, who she believes can help her understand what happened to Joan’s parents who, we learn, killed themselves separately when she was ten.

In Los Angeles her days are filled with ruminating and shoplifting. She gets a job as a barista and meets a variety of men who want to sleep with her, including Lenny, her senile landlord, and River, the 22-year-old dropout who lives in the yurt. She pops pills and answers text messages from Vic’s angry widow.

Taddeo balances the sex, violence, and melodrama of her plot with insightful character development. Joan is almost impossible to look away from on every page. “When I saw boys in the streets with their low-slung backpacks, I thought of the girls they liked, the girls who got to be eleven and twelve and thirteen, with unicorn stickers and slap bracelets. I did not get to be any of those ages. I was ten and then I was thirty, and then I was thirty-seven.”

Alice, it turns out, is Joan’s half-sister, the product of her father’s extramarital affair. Alice is unaware of this and they become friends, but what friends! Taddeo does not craft a likable heroine. Instead, she does more or less the opposite. Joan takes a perverse pleasure in exposing the ugliest parts of herself. Her worldview is primal, opportunistic, hypersexualized: All men are sexual prospects and all women are rivals, even her new bestie Alice. “She wore no makeup and I wanted to kill her,” Joan recalls. “But first I wanted to put her in a cage, fatten her up, feed her hormones and pig cheeks and Fanta. Knock her teeth out and shave her eyebrows. I wanted her to die ugly.”

Taddeo is not a subtle writer. “Animal” is a story about trauma, how the psychic wounds of childhood draw the blueprint for a lifetime of emotional carnage and, eventually, physical violence. In the course of the novel, Joan suffers, commits or bears witness to rapes, child molestation, suicide and murder. In the midst of the financial crisis of 2008, a Wall Street trader pays her a thousand dollars to kick him in the testicles.

I know this sounds terrible but Joan’s voice is so sharp and magnetic that the reader will follow her anywhere — even to the dark and increasingly unbelievable depths her creator sends her. Joan’s values remain consistent throughout. Every husband cheats, and every adultery results in mortal injury or death. Little girls are warped by a culture that views them as sexual objects almost from birth. Joan remembers of a family friend: “His Zippo had a pinup girl on it. Long brown hair with bangs and a pink bikini. My youth was marked by such images — seeing them on playing cards or drawn crudely on bathroom stalls.”

I was about ninety percent through the book when I realized who Joan was telling her story to and it kind of changed my perspective of the whole book. The story goes a bit off the rails at the end, but the questions it asks are satisfyingly answered.

As I said at the beginning, this book is not for everyone. But it’s quite a story and Taddeo can craft some killer narrative and has a great gift for aphorisms. When I first started the book, I wasn’t sure I would finish it but, as I got into it, I felt I needed to see what happened next and I’m glad I finished it.

Posted by Tom in Books, Literature

Cathedral

Amazon.com: Cathedral: 9781609457235: Hopkins, Ben: Books

I recently finished reading Cathedral by Ben Hopkins. It’s not something I would ordinarily read, but it came highly recommended and I thoroughly enjoyed it. The hardcopy version is some 600 pages and it looks a bit like some saga but the writing is bright and the many interlocking stories are interesting and include some insightful commentary on modern issues.

The book revolves around the building of a cathedral in the mythical town of Hageburg in Alsace. The book is set in the ‘high middle ages’ with the action beginning in the 13th century. The focus is on the mercantile aspects of the town and people and highlights the emergence of the guilds as a counterweight to the hereditary aristocracy.

Hopkins’ father was an economist and there’s no lack of focus on money and how such a giant undertaking as a cathedral might be paid for. Hopkins is also a film maker and has a good eye for scenes with tension and some surprises.

There are plenty of villains in this parade of skirmishes and subterfuges, and few who might pass as heroes. Among the latter are a stonemason who must hide his most intimate feelings, a Jewish entrepreneur with complicated father issues and a nobleman whose designs for the cathedral’s spectacular rose window somehow survive his own lost dreams. And although she’s too conniving to be a conventional heroine, the sharp-tongued peasant girl who grows up to command her own fortune just might turn out to be the winner in Hagenburg’s high-stakes historical lottery.

I enjoyed the book and I recommend it if you have some time on your hands. It’s also a book you can put down and pick up again, so don’t think you have to read the whole thing all at once. Give it a try, though. You might like it.

Posted by Tom in Books, Literature

Everywhere You Don’t Belong

Amazon.com: Everywhere You Don't Belong (9781616208790): Bump, Gabriel:  Books

I recently finished reading Everywhere You Don’t Belong, the debut novel by Gabriel Bump. It was a New York Times Notable Book of 2020 and winner of the Ernest Gaines Award. It’s a dark but funny coming-of-age novel about growing up on the South Shore of Chicago. I enjoyed it and I recommend it to everyone.

It’s about a young boy, Claude McKay Love, growing up on the South Shore of Chicago as he is abandoned by his parents and left to be raised by his grandma and her friend, Paul. While you might think that this book would sink into pathos, Bump saves it by not dwelling on it and moving on to the next adventure, usually with a quip of sorts as when Grandma witnesses a fistfight between her son-in-law and another man; “That’s enough culture for one day.”

The book moves fast – skipping time and with short, sharp paragraphs. Suddenly he is in high school getting beaten up so that it lands him in the hospital. A local gang called the ‘Redbelters’ sells drugs and guns to local youth and instigates riots in which ‘civilians’ are caught between the gang and the equally bloody-minded police.

There’s a love angle. Claude encounters pig-tailed Janice in elementary school and we follow them through high school and beyond. Claude has a hard time with girls. The first time Janice calls him ‘cute’ “I choked on nothing, felt my heart trip a few times. … I wanted to call her beautiful,” Claude says. Instead, “I stammered into her face, spit some, choked on nothing, coughed, and spit some more.” Claude never gets any smoother, and he’s all the more charming for it.

The book is also social commentary, but it’s woven into the narrative and is never preachy or self-righteous. Bump writes on belonging and not belonging. He leaves Chicago to go to college but discovers that he doesn’t really fit in there either. Writing for the school newspaper, he’s asked to write articles about the black experience or black history or culture as though the only thing people can see about him is his blackness. But he finds love is a way home.

It’s well-written and quite funny at times. It’s a fast read and Bump is a good writer that I’m sure we’re going to hear more from. Give it a try!!

Posted by Tom in Books, Literature

The Sense of an Ending

The Sense of an Ending by Julian Barnes | BookDragon

I recently finished reading ‘The Sense of an Ending’ by Julian Barnes. It was the 2011 winner of the Man Booker Prize (now The Booker Prize) the most coveted literary award in the English speaking world. I enjoyed it; Barnes is a gifted writer who has written, I believe, some 18 novels, many of which have won awards. It’s a short and engrossing book, is one of those novels that takes a somewhat close look at the inner life of a man. It reminds me a bit of ‘The Remains of the Day’.

Tony Webster is a cautious man in his sixties who has tried to more or less slide through life without making any waves or drawing too much attention. He receives one day an unexpected bequest – a middling sum from the mother of his university girlfriend, Veronica.

The bequest upsets Tony and he wonders what’s behind it. He reaches out to Veronica – with whom he had broken up badly to try and understand it. Through a series of emails, he tries to answer a number of questions. Had he loved Veronica? At the time he lacked the courage to say one way or the other. What had happened to the young man he had been, so anxious to be released into an adult life where he would make his mark?

Gradually, Tony assembles his memories – some accurate, some not and we begin to understand Tony, a man so afraid of loss that he avoids connections rather than embracing them. He didn’t consummate his relationship with Veronica because he wanted to avoid the questions that might follow. he eventually married a non-complicated woman and sought a mature, quiet life. Decades later he sees, or thinks he sees, his mistake. ‘We thought we were being mature when we were only being safe.’

Tony had thought Veronica was unable to understand anyone else’s emotional life, but it was really him who could look outside his own thoughts. The unreliability of his narration actually makes the book as we decipher more about him and his relationship to others as we go on. “I have an instinct for survival, for self-­preservation,” he reflects. “Perhaps this is what Veronica called cowardice and I called being peaceable.” Each time he thinks he understand, Veronica points out that he seems to understand nothing.

It’s a short book and an easy read. I understand that they have made a movie based on it, but I can’t imagine how. Give it a read to see a master novelist at the height of his power.

Posted by Tom in Books, Literature

Northern Spy

I recently finished reading Northern Spy, the thriller by Flynn Berry. It’s not my usual genre, but I really enjoyed the book.

Despite the title, the book is not really about apples. Tessa Daly is a divorced mother of a six month old child living in a village in the suburbs of Belfast who works for the BBC producing a news program. It’s been a few years since the Good Friday agreement was signed but tensions are as high as ever and there are still the occasional skirmishes. Tessa is surprised one day watching a news program at work to see her sister, Marion taking part in an IRA robbery.

Tessa assumes at first, and so tells the police, that Marion has been forced to participate by the IRA. Soon, however, she is shocked to discover that Marion has been working with the IRA for seven years. Recently, however, Marion says that she has begun secretly working with MI5 and feeding them information to help set the stage for a peace agreement.

In an attempt to reduce bloodshed, however, Marion has deliberately sabotaged a bomb that was targeted by the IRA at a market and now she is under surveillance by both the IRA and MI5. So she asks Tessa to join her acting as a double agent and funneling information to her MI5 contact. Tessa is accepted by the IRA and asked to do increasingly dangerous tasks as she feels more and more trapped and worried for her family and her son.

If you like your thrillers with lots of car chases and explosions and suave secret agents, this is not for you. It is a page-turner, though as the tension builds and both Tessa and Marion are in increasing danger of getting caught and killed both by the IRA and the police.

Berry is a good writer and the book is an enjoyable read. The story flows nicely as the tension and uncertainty build. I enjoyed it and you should give it a shot.

Posted by Tom in Books, Literature