We Need to Talk About Kevin

We Need to Talk About Kevin

2003 • 400 pages

Ratings128

Average rating4.1

15

This review can also be found on my blog.Well, this was dark as hell. I think I had a general idea of what We Need to Talk About Kevin was about before going into it, but I had no idea the extent to which it would go. It's formatted interestingly: a woman's letters to her ex-husband exploring their past together, primarily her relationship with their son. Unfortunately this format didn't work especially well with the writing style – it's simply not believable to think someone would write letters like this – but ultimately did work extremely well in conveying what it was trying to convey.I knew this about myself in advance, too: that I was just the sort of woman who had the capacity, however ghastly, to rue even so unretractable a matter as another person.There was a lot to say about gender roles and expectations surrounding women, particularly the pressures to have children and how the experience is built up to be so much. There's also some decent commentary on how women can be treated less like people and more like property once they become pregnant. The main character is clearly following the script she feels she should, rather than building the life she wants to. There's also plenty of commentary on nature vs nurture that I won't even begin to get into.A boy is a dangerous animal.If unlikeable characters are not your deal, you will not like this book. Eva herself is absolutely insufferable: she's condescending and rude, and even though you root for her to a certain extent and see what she's seeing, it's easy to see her husband's perspective as well. On the flip side, Franklin is a terrible husband. My internal monologue was saying “girl, dump him” the whole time I read this. He's sexist, controlling, and completely stops seeing his wife as her own person. Please, do not even get me started on Kevin. It's clear from the outset that he's not a character we will like.“You know, it is different when it's yours. You can't go home.” Indeed, my yearning to go home had grown recurrent, but was most intense when I was already there.My biggest issue with this was that the first quarter or so felt dry as hell. While I understand why the slow buildup, I just kept waiting for something to happen. Once the ball gets rolling, though, this is pretty packed with underlying tension and had me waiting on the edge of my seat for what I knew was coming. There were a few moments where I actually brought my hand to my mouth in horror: not because Eva explicitly announced some terrible event, but because she hinted to it so subtly and clearly that it hit even harder. The subsequent descriptions weren't nearly as impactful as the quiet reveals themselves.Kevin was a shell game in which all three cups were empty.I haven't seen the movie so I can't make a comparison, but this is one heavy and gripping piece of literature. I assume there's no way the subtleties and introspective details of this novel could be translated to film, so I'm expecting a more surface-level story once I do watch the adaptation. Regardless, I definitely recommend this to those who feel they can work through the more dense literary fiction to get to the thriller within.Blog Twitter Instagram Facebook

February 13, 2020