Ratings6
Average rating3.8
Longlisted for the International Booker Prize This lyrical debut novel is at once a passionate coming-of-age story, a meditation on illness and death, and a kaleidoscopic journey through one woman’s life—told in part by the malevolent voice of her disease. Lia, her husband Harry, and their beloved daughter, Iris, are a precisely balanced family of three. With Iris struggling to navigate the social tightrope of early adolescence, their tender home is a much-needed refuge. But when a sudden diagnosis threatens to derail each of their lives, the secrets of Lia’s past come rushing into the present, and the world around them begins to transform. Deftly guided through time, we discover the people who shaped Lia’s youth; from her deeply religious mother to her troubled first love. In turn, each will take their place in the shifting landscape of Lia’s body; at the center of which dances a gleeful narrator, learning her life from the inside, growing more emboldened by the day. Pivoting between the domestic and the epic, the comic and the heart-breaking, this astonishing novel unearths the darkness and levity of one woman’s life to symphonic effect.
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my issues with this book were i think mostly my issues and to do with my enjoyment, not the quality of the book itself.
i was actually recommended this book because of the particular narrative structure, which is so real! i love strange story structures. and the idea of one of the points of view in the story being from the sickness within a body is so! fascinating! but for some reason the idea of the cancer being an actively and “consciously” malicious entity - deriving joy from destroying someone from the inside out and seeing the body's attempts to stop it - didn't vibe with me. i can see how it might hit for other people, but i think it would've actually hit me more emotionally if it had been a neutral entity that is just... happening to the body.