Book Review: My Absolute Darling by Gabriel Tallent

04.28.2020

By Zara Reed

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Category:
Author: Gabriel Tallent
Format: Trade Paperback, 420 pages
Publisher: Riverhead Books, imprint of Penguin Random House
ISBN: 978-0-7352-1117-9
Pub Date: August 29, 2017

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Summary from Publisher:

At 14, Turtle Alveston knows the use of every gun on her wall. She knows how to snare a rabbit, sharpen a blade and splint a bone. She knows that her daddy loves her more than anything else in this world and he’ll do whatever it takes to keep her with him.

But she doesn’t know why she feels so different from the other girls at school; why the line between love and pain can be so hard to see. Or why making a friend may be the bravest and most terrifying thing she has ever done.

Sometimes the people you’re supposed to trust are the ones who do most harm. And what you’ve been taught to fear is the very thing that will save you…

  • From Goodreads

Book Review:

The novel, My Absolute Darling, by Gabriel Tallent, is a haunting novel that reverberates the lyrical mastery of language and the poise of intelligence and gifted craftsmanship. The novel reduces readers into a world that is enthralling and vast as its setting, much like the encompassing bewilderment and dangers of nature, yet terrifies and nullifies comprehension and belief with its taut tension and abrasive cruelty.

This is a book that readers will not simply peruse and superficially consider but will submerge themselves under from the weight of its raw violence and emotional complexity.

The characters are neither cliched, nor superficial, but carved out of imagination and realism.

Turtle Alveston is tragically unique in her isolated upbringing, more a child to the wild than she is to civilization; and calculated in her precision and self-efficacy in deftly meeting her intended targets at the barrel of her gun. She knows the wilderness, mapping it out through the barefooted soles of her calloused feet, recognizing territory through foliage species to the anatomy of riverbeds and the wildlife beneath. The wilderness, simultaneously her escape and her prison, hides her from a world that always pulls her back to her tormenter, Martin Alveston, her father.

Martin Alveston is broad in body as he is narrow in his apocalyptic thinking; cruel as they consider him charismatic; and possessed with the compulsion to control, manipulate, and torment his daughter; possessive of her whereabouts, driven to obsession and madness of who she is, and that she fully and wholly belongs only to him.

Other characters transpire around her, those that provide newness, solace, sometimes hope: Daniel Alveston, her grandfather, who affectionately calls her Sweetpea; Jacob Learner and his friend, Brett, boys she encounters in the wilderness who expose her to peer connection and the possibility of friendship; Anna, a schoolteacher whose belief in her ability to grow and thrive finally convinces her to reconsider her efforts; and Cayenne, a younger sister figure that compels her to action.

The plot is vividly tense with its movement between safety and terror, calm and intensity, speculation and self-deprecation. It is taut with raw, graphic cruelty and dark violence that it is, at times, extremely difficult to read. The story is a legacy to survival in its most desperate form. And the hardness of its main characters are complex and emotionally intertwined by psychosomatic symptoms rooted in a turbulent and traumatic past.

The language and narrative, though, is fluent in its lyrical eloquence, lush in its precision, and exacting in its brutality. The dialogue, both internal and external, are convincingly realistic that the characters become vivid caricatures extrapolated from imagination and fiction, but also unforgettable people with whom the reader becomes most intimate.

The pacing is close to perfect, though a section of the plot could have been easily omitted to move the story further and faster to its climactic peak.

And the cover design is as deceptive and secretive of the story’s contents as the characters and plot itself, leaving the reader to imagine what its dark heroine, Turtle Alveston and her tormentor, Martin Alveston, look like and what may recede behind the thick foliage of the forest that isolates them both from the world.

This is a dark and emotionally wrought novel that will inflict you with fear and courage, hoping for the ultimate emancipation and freedom for its most tormented characters. It will make you witness the horrifying, yet deeply complex nature of love, hate, dependence, deprivation, compulsion, possession, and hardened will that exists in the relationships of complex trauma. And it will move you to fear, to anguish—and to tears.

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Characters: 5 stars
Plot: 5 stars
Language/Narrative: 5 stars
Dialogue: 5 stars
Pacing: 4 stars
Cover Design: 4 stars

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Rating

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A special thanks to Penguin Random House Canada on behalf of Riverhead Books for providing me with a copy of My Absolute Darling by Gabriel Tallent in exchange for an honest and timely review.

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About the Author:

  • From Penguin Random House Canada website

Gabriel Tallent is the author of the New York Times-bestselling novel My Absolute Darling. He was born in New Mexico and raised on the Mendocino coast by two mothers. He received his B.A. from Willamette University in 2010, and after graduation spent two seasons leading youth trail crews in the backcountry of the Pacific Northwest. Tallent lives in Salt Lake City.

  • From Penguin Random House Canada website

Links:

You can connect with the author, Gabriel Tallent, on his official website and Goodreads. 

Book Review: The Son of a Trickster by Eden Robinson

05.03.2017

By Zara Reed

 bk-cvr-son-of-a-trickster

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Category: Fiction

Author: Eden Robinson

Format: Hardcover, 326 pages

Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf Canada

ISBN: 978-0-345-81078-6

Pub Date: February 7, 2017

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Summary from Publisher:

Everyone knows a guy like Jared: the burnout kid in high school who sells weed cookies and has a scary mom who’s often wasted and wielding some kind of weapon. Jared does smoke and drink too much, and he does make the best cookies in town, and his mom is a mess, but he’s also a kid who has an immense capacity for compassion and an impulse to watch over people more than twice his age, and he can’t rely on anyone for consistent love and support, except for his flatulent pit bull, Baby Killer (he calls her Baby)–and now she’s dead.

Jared can’t count on his mom to stay sober and stick around to take care of him. He can’t rely on his dad to pay the bills and support his new wife and step-daughter. Jared is only sixteen but feels like he is the one who must stabilize his family’s life, even look out for his elderly neighbours. But he struggles to keep everything afloat…and sometimes he blacks out. And he puzzles over why his maternal grandmother has never liked him, why she says he’s the son of a trickster, that he isn’t human. Mind you, ravens speak to him–even when he’s not stoned.
You think you know Jared, but you don’t.

  • From Chapters-Indigo website

Book Review:

The Son of a Trickster is a graphic and intense novel about an Indigenous teenage boy named Jared whose life in a reservation community is more than complicated.

The book, like his upbringing, begins in an uncommon, yet hopeful way—one with a father, a mother, and a home—but quickly delves into a history of hardship and abuse.

What is stark about this novel, is its raw narrative, one that doesn’t hold back, but is surprisingly abrasive and edgy, and yet can evoke a subtle tenderness between characters especially between Jared and his mother, Marguerite (otherwise known as Maggie).

Jared’s world is one in which poverty, drugs, partying, neglect, and violence become a natural and habitual lifestyle, one that Jared understands, accepts, and resigns to as he mildly navigates through his life and the strange things that seem to be happening to him.

This kind of setting and dialogue is not only unsettling, but blatantly opens up Jared’s world to the reader in an intimate and graphic display.

The novel is as character-driven as it is volatile where the characters themselves seem wonderfully absurd and yet also by their strangeness seem even more unique, vulnerable, and disturbing.

These relationships range from the harshly temperamental and overtly protective and violent mother, Maggie to the inept, kind, yet irresponsible father, Phil. There’s the absent maternal grandmother, Anita Moody and the sassy paternal grandmother, Nana Sophia. There’s the violent male figures like David, Ritchie, and Dylan to the nurturing, yet heavily burdened neighbours, Mr. and Mrs. Jaks. And of course, there is the mysterious Wee’git and the strange, intelligent, yet hauntingly disturbed girlfriend, Sarah.

Together, these characters make up the daily, yet torrential life of Jared Moody.

As a reader, you’d think this kind of displacement and seedy, violent setting would be more than enough to make a story, but within the madness of Jared’s violent lifestyle is what is at the heart of the book—magic.

When magic starts appearing in the novel, things start to get really interesting. What appears to be stoned hallucinations quickly evolve into creative, yet terrifying images of fantasy and magic, which unravels itself as Jared’s identity and knowledge of himself and his genealogy become more transparent.

There’s also a reoccurring saying in the book, which stays with Jared throughout the novel: The world is hard. You have to be harder. And so, as the novel progresses, Jared himself, must prepare for more strength and courage.

As magic is drawn to magic, readers who enjoy the darker side of paranormal fantasy and are interested in the magic of Indigenous culture and folklore, will flock to this novel like fireflies.

The Son of a Trickster is the first of a planned trilogy.

 

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Characters: 3.5 stars

Plot: 3.5 stars

Language/Narrative: 3 stars

Dialogue: 4 stars

Pacing: 4 stars

Cover Design: 4 stars

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Rating

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A special thanks to Penguin Random House for providing me with a copy of the book, Son of a Trickster by Eden Robinson in exchange for an honest review.

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About the Author:

author - eden robinson

Haisla/Heilstuk novelist Eden Robinson is the author of a collection of short stories written when she was a Goth, called Traplines. Her two previous novels, Monkey Beach and Blood Sports, were written before she discovered she was gluten-intolerant and tend to be quite grim, the latter being especially gruesome because, halfway through writing the manuscript, Robinson gave up a two-pack-a-day cigarette habit and the more she suffered, the more her characters suffered. Son of a Trickster was written under the influence of pan-fried tofu and nutritional yeast, which may explain things but probably doesn’t.

  • From the novel.

Links:

You can connect with Eden Robinson on Facebook  and Goodreads.

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