rachelmanija: (Books: old)
rachelmanija ([personal profile] rachelmanija) wrote2014-11-22 12:28 pm

We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves, by Karen Joy Fowler

Rosemary once was a child in a family with a sister, Fern, and a brother, Lowell. Now she's in college, palling around with a manic pixie dream girl named Harlow and trying not to think about the mysterious event that caused Fern to vanish and Lowell's life to go off the rails. The novel switches between Rosemary's childhood and adulthood as she comes to grips with whatever happened.

This novel has a possibly surprising plot twist about a fifth of the way in; I say possibly because I learned of it in a review, and there are other elements of the novel itself which may make it immediately evident. However, I will keep it a surprise for the benefit of those who don't want to be spoiled. I'll put it behind a cut.

Fowler is a highly skilled author whose books, unfortunately, never appeal to me anywhere near as much as they appeal to others. She always has intriguing premises and her novels always get rave reviews, so I keep checking them out. To date, I have never much liked any of them. Something about her prose style, characterization, and tone always strikes me as distant and chilly. This book was no exception. It involves a lot of potentially interesting and moving elements, but I found it dry and unsatisfying. However, I am in the minority in this, so you may well love this or any other of her books.

That being said, if you are at all sensitive to animal harm, avoid this book. It is centrally concerned with cruelty to animals, and contains multiple graphic depictions of it. (I didn't know this when I started, or I would not have read it.)

Great title, though.

Fern is a chimpanzee, raised in the household and treated as Rosemary's sister. She's then taken away to a lab, where she is considered an animal and conditions are cruel bordering on sadistic. I was primarily interested in what it would be like to see an animal as a sister, and the book did deal with that, but it was more about how chimpanzee experiments are cruel even if they're not intended to be.

What I meant by spoilery elements in the book itself is the chimp on the cover, plus a highly relevant epigraph.

By Karen Joy Fowler We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves

pameladean: chalk-fronted corporal dragonfly (Libellula julia)

[personal profile] pameladean 2014-11-23 01:00 am (UTC)(link)
This was my experience I pretty much completely failed to appreciate The Jane Austen Book Club, to my dismay and astonishment; but I found this one impossible to put down and extremely gripping. I went into it with essentially no spoilers and in fact a misapprehension: my partner had read aloud three very funny bits, and I knew Fowler was capable of being very funny. I don't usually look at book covers or read blurbs because I don't like spoilers; also it was a library book and some of the cover art was concealed. So it was all a total surprise to me and the bad parts were very shocking, but I felt they were worth it.

I have several writers that I react to as Rachel does to Fowler, chief among them Lisa Goldstein, whom I always feel I am reading through a thick sheet of glass that dulls hearing, sensation, and thought. Drives me crazy because I should absolutely love her books. Reading is very odd, when you think about it.

P.

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2014-11-23 01:34 am (UTC)(link)
Reading is very odd, when you think about it.

I find this too. You can guess about genre or style to some extent... but then actual likes and dislikes can diverge in strange ways.

[identity profile] jorrie-spencer.livejournal.com 2014-11-23 02:37 am (UTC)(link)
Book-reader chemistry is a real thing, that's for sure! I know what you mean about the sheet of glass.

[identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com 2014-11-23 03:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Another unmoved by Jane Austen Book Club. (Except when it irritated me.)

Yeah, on Lisa Goldstein. Part of my problem with her work is when she dips into history, from a resolutely modern perspective. Kind of all one voice. Like her, though, and what she wants to say.