20 Books of Summer, 5: Crudo by Olivia Laing (2018)

Behind on the challenge, as ever, I picked up a novella. It vaguely fits with a food theme as crudo, “raw” in Italian, can refer to fish or meat platters (depicted on the original hardback cover). In this context, though, it connotes the raw material of a life: a messy matrix of choices and random happenings, rooted in a particular moment in time.

This is set over four and a bit months of 2017 and steeped in the protagonist’s detached horror at political and environmental breakdown. She’s just turned 40 and, in between two trips to New York City, has a vacation in Tuscany, dabbles in writing and art criticism, and settles into married life in London even though she’s used to independence and nomadism.

For as hyper-real as the contents are, Laing is doing something experimental, even fantastical – blending biography with autofiction and cultural commentary by making her main character, apparently, Kathy Acker. Never mind that Acker died of breast cancer in 1997.

I knew nothing of Acker but – while this is clearly born of deep admiration, as well as familiarity with her every written word – that didn’t matter. Acker quotes and Trump tweets are inserted verbatim, with the sources given in a “Something Borrowed” section at the end.

Like Jenny Offill’s Weather, this is a wry and all too relatable take on current events and the average person’s hypocrisy and sense of helplessness, with the lack of speech marks and shortage of punctuation I’ve come to expect from ultramodern novels:

she might as well continue with her small and cultivated life, pick the dahlias, stake the ones that had fallen down, she’d always known whatever it was wasn’t going to last for long.

40, not a bad run in the history of human existence but she’d really rather it all kept going, water in the taps, whales in the oceans, fruits and duvets, the whole sumptuous parade

This is how it is then, walking backwards into disaster, braying all the way.

I’ve somehow read almost all of Laing’s oeuvre (barring her essays, Funny Weather) and have found books like The Trip to Echo Spring, The Lonely City and Everybody wide-ranging and insightful. Crudo feels as faithful to life as Rachel Cusk’s autofiction or Deborah Levy’s autobiography, but also like an attempt to make something altogether new out of the stuff of our unprecedented times. No doubt some of the intertextuality of this, her only fiction to date, was lost on me, but I enjoyed it much more than I expected to – it’s funny as well as eminently quotable – and that’s always a win. (Little Free Library)

12 responses

  1. margaret21's avatar

    To my shame, I’d never heard of Olivia Laing. But this one looks worth a punt.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      To the River would seem the most to your taste, being nature/travel. The Trip to Echo Spring, about alcoholic writers, is probably my favourite.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Elle's avatar

    I’m quite impressed that this holds up several years on from its publication—it felt so of-the-moment when it first came out that I wasn’t sure it would last. (Funny Weather is not really worth it, btw; her best stuff is all longform.)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Good to know. I was sent a paperback of Funny Weather in the same parcel with Everybody, but only glanced at it.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. hopewellslibraryoflife's avatar

    “making her main character, apparently, Kathy Acker. Never mind that Acker died of breast cancer in 1997.” Interesting, but I have extreme Trump-anything fatigue, so maybe not. Your review is excellent.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Thanks! I can understand that.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Laura's avatar

    I struggled a bit with The Lonely City, but I’ve not read any of Laing’s fiction and the comparison to Weather makes this one sound interesting.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      This is her only fiction as far as I know. A super-quick and incisive read at just 130 pages.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. […] Crudo by Olivia Laing: A wry, all too relatable take on recent events and our collective hypocrisy and sense of helplessness. Biography + autofiction + cultural commentary. […]

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  6. […] feel unconnected and the encounters within them random, building to nothing. Though a bit like Crudo, this has very little detail to latch onto and so was pretentious in its opacity. I’ve generally […]

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  7. […] consider her one of our most important contemporary thinkers. I was also pleasantly surprised by Crudo so will be reading this second novel, too. I’ll be reviewing it early for Shelf Awareness as […]

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