Recent Releases by Nathan Hill, Hisham Matar, Sigrid Nunez and More

One key way in which 2024’s reading has already differed from previous years’ is that I no longer avoid doorstoppers. I now classify any book with over 400 pages as a doorstopper, and by that definition I have already gotten through three this year: The Tidal Year plus two of the below, with Wellness standing out as the true whopper at 597 small-print pages. January offered a set of releases full of variety: gritty yet funny flash fiction; a novel of big ideas and big empathy for its flawed characters; an exile’s elegant love letter to Libya from London; a coy pandemic-era reflection on connection and creation; and a tour of nature close to home.

 

Universally Adored and Other One Dollar Stories by Elizabeth Bruce

This was a great collection of 33 stories, all of them beginning with the words “One Dollar” and most of flash fiction length. Bruce has a knack for quickly introducing a setup and protagonist. The voice and setting vary enough that no two stories sound the same. What is the worth of a dollar? In some cases, where there’s a more contemporary frame of reference, a dollar is a sign of desperation (for the man who’s lost house, job and wife in “Little Jimmy,” for the coupon-cutting penny-pincher whose unbroken monologue makes up the whole of “Grocery List”), or maybe just enough for a small treat for a child (as in “Mouse Socks” or “Boogie Board”). In the historical stories, a dollar can buy a lot more. It’s a tank of gas – and a lesson on the evils of segregation – in “Gas Station”; it’s a huckster’s exorbitant charge for a mocked-up relic in “The Grass Jesus Walked On.”

The tone ranges from black comedy (“Festus”) to high tragedy (“Votive Candle”), but the book mostly falls within the realm of dirty realism with the attention to working-class country folk, so I’d recommend the collection to fans of authors who perch on the lighter side of that subgenre, such as Barbara Kingsolver or Denis Johnson. A few of my favorite stories, in addition to the above, were “Ice-Cold Water,” which I appreciated for the Washington D.C. setting and the way that an assumption about who would be racist was overturned by a moment of simple compassion; “Dolores,” in which a slick humanitarian fundraiser meets a waitress who has his number; and “Boiling the Buggers,” a window onto Covid-exacerbated mental illness. (Read via BookSirens)

 

Wellness by Nathan Hill

Somehow nearly eight years have passed since Hill’s debut novel, The Nix, which I dubbed “a rich, multi-layered story about family curses and failure.” I admired it as much for its prose as for its ideas, and Wellness is just as effervescent and insightful. It’s a state-of-the-nation novel filtered through one Chicago family: experimental photographer and underperforming academic Jack; his wife Elizabeth, a placebo researcher at Wellness; and their YouTube-obsessed son Toby. They’ve recently invested their life savings in a new condo and are considering trendy features like open shelves and separate master bedrooms. It would be oversimplifying, but true, to say that this couple is experiencing midlife and marital crises. Their nineties college romance – and a time of life when everything felt open and possible – is so remote now. When Elizabeth suggests they join a friend at a swingers’ club and a patient of hers who’s also a parent at Toby’s school sees them outside, chaos ensues.

Some elements from The Nix carry over, such as campus politics, the American Midwest, and mother–son relationships, but also broader questions of authenticity, purpose and nurture. Is love itself a placebo? The novel spends time with Jack and Elizabeth at the dawn of their relationship and in the present day, but also looks back to their early careers and first years of parenthood. Hill is clearly fascinated with the sort of psychological experimentation Elizabeth engages in (there’s a whole bibliography of scientific papers consulted) but also turns it to humorous effect, as when Elizabeth subjects Toby to the marshmallow test. A lot of information is conveyed through dialogue, yet it never feels forced. A couple of long asides, on Elizabeth’s family history and the algorithms guiding Jack’s interactions with his conspiracy theorist father, tried my patience, but I loved a four-page chapter on a funeral supper where every sentence starts “There was.” Sooooo many quotable lines throughout.

The only fault in an addictive and spot-on novel (how did he know?! you’ll find yourself thinking about your own attitude to work/marriage/children) is that Hill is so committed to excavating these characters’ backstory of stunted emotion – Jack estranged from his religious Kansas farmer parents after a traumatic incident you feel right in the gut; Elizabeth glad to jettison her father’s wealth with his anger – that he hurries through the denouement. Still, this is sure to be a fiction highlight of my year. It’s one for readers of Jonathan Franzen, sure, but I also thought it reminiscent of Katherine Heiny’s Standard Deviation and Meg Wolitzer’s The Interestings.

With thanks to Picador for the proof copy for review.

 

My Friends by Hisham Matar

“Benghazi was the one place I longed for the most, it was also the place I most feared to return to.”

Taking a long walk through London one day, Khaled looks back from midlife on the choices he and his two best friends have made. He first came to the UK as an eighteen-year-old student at Edinburgh University. Everything that came after stemmed from one fateful day. Matar places Khaled and his university friend Mustafa at a real-life demonstration outside the Libyan embassy in London in 1984, which ended in a rain of bullets and the accidental death of a female police officer. Khaled’s physical wound is less crippling than the sense of being cut off from his homeland and his family. As he continues his literary studies and begins teaching, he decides to keep his injury a secret from them, as from nearly everyone else in his life. On a trip to Paris to support a female friend undergoing surgery, he happens to meet Hosam, a writer whose work enraptured him when he heard it on the radio back home long ago. Decades pass and the Arab Spring prompts his friends to take different paths.

I’d previously only read Matar’s short nonfiction work A Month in Siena. The slow, meditative style I enjoyed so much there didn’t translate well into doorstopper length; by the 300-page mark I found myself skimming to see if anything else might happen. Despite the title, we come to know Mustafa and Hosam much less well than we do Khaled. I would happily have had the book’s plot and sentiment concentrated into a taut 200 pages. However, I’m still interested in trying other books by Matar. In the Country of Men is significantly shorter and available from the backroom storage area of my library, and his Folio Prize-winning memoir The Return, too, is on shelf and I reckon will be right up my street.

With thanks to Viking (Penguin) for the proof copy for review.

 

The Vulnerables by Sigrid Nunez

I’m a huge Nunez fan after reading The Friend, What Are You Going Through, and especially A Feather on the Breath of God. Her last three books have been very much of a piece: autofiction voiced by an unnamed woman who has a duty of care towards a friend or a friend’s pet and ponders, in wry meta fashion, the nature of autobiographical writing and the meaning of life and death at a time of climate breakdown. Alas, The Vulnerables seems like no more than a rehashing of The Friend, with flanking main characters chosen at random from central casting: a parrot named Eureka and a mentally ill college drop-out called Vetch. This quirky trio is thrown together in a lavish New York City apartment during lockdown and nothing much happens but conversation brings them closer.

A second problem: Covid-19 stories feel dated. For the first two years of the pandemic I read obsessively about it, mostly nonfiction accounts from healthcare workers or ordinary people looking for community or turning to nature in a time of collective crisis. But now when I come across it as a major element in a book, it feels like an out-of-place artefact; I’m almost embarrassed for the author: so sorry, but you missed your moment. My disappointment may primarily be because my expectations were so high. I’ve noted that two blogger friends new to Nunez were enthusiastic about this (but so was Susan, who’d enjoyed her before). That’s not to say this wasn’t a pleasantly fluid and incisive read, even if its message of essential human vulnerability is an obvious one. Anyway, I’ll take Nunez musing on familiar subjects over most other contemporary writers any day:

“Never write ‘I don’t remember,’ Editor says; it undermines your authority. But write as if you remember everything and Reader will smell a rat.”

“You can start with fiction or start with documentary, according to Jean-Luc Goddard. Either way, you will inevitably find the other.”

“I like this clarification by the narrator of a book by Stendhal: ‘It is not out of egotism that I say “I”; it is simply the quickest way to tell the story.’)”


(À propos of the doorstoppers above)

“Does that mean a long novel is easier to write than a short one? / Um, no. But, to borrow from a certain critic, in almost every long book I read I see a short one shirking its job.”

With thanks to Virago for the proof copy for review.

 

And a bonus work of nonfiction:

Local: A Search for Nearby Nature and Wildness by Alastair Humphreys

Lev Parikian alerted me to this amiable record of weekly discoveries of the nature on one’s home turf. Humphreys has been an international adventure traveller and written many books about his exploits. Here, by contrast, he zooms the lens in about as far as it will go, ordering a custom-made 20-km-square OS map that has his house at the centre and choosing one surrounding grid square per week (so 52 out of a total of 400) to cycle to and explore. He’s chosen to leave his town unnamed so this can function as an Everyman’s journey through edgelands. And his descriptions and black-and-white photographs really do present an accurate microcosm of modern England: fields, woods, waterways, suburban streets.

From one November to the next, he watches the seasons advance and finds many magical spaces with everyday wonders to appreciate. “This project was already beginning to challenge my assumptions of what was beautiful or natural in the landscape,” he writes in his second week. True, he also finds distressing amounts of litter, no-access signs and evidence of environmental degradation. But curiosity is his watchword: “The more I pay attention, the more I notice. The more I notice, the more I learn.”

Each week’s observations send him down a research rabbit hole, with topics including caves, land management, mudlarking, plant species, and much more. The nature of the short chapters means that there can only ever be a cursory look at huge issues like rewilding and veganism, but Humphreys is nimble in weaving in the brief, matter-of-fact discussions. His eagerness is irrepressible. “How you look, what you see, and the way all this makes you feel: a single map and the best of all possible worlds.” (See also: Paul’s review.)

With thanks to the author for the free copy for review.

25 responses

  1. A Life in Books's avatar

    Thanks for the Vulnerables link, Rebecca. Reactions to this one have been interesting. We differed a little on Wellness – the algorithm section grated for me, although there’s no doubt that many need to get to grips with the idea – and I think I enjoyed My Friends more than you, despite my usual doorstopper reservations.

    I like that Local quote about curiosity very much and may start a project like this myself.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      We overlapped a lot on our January reading this year. I’ve held off on reading your reviews until I’d finished my own. Indeed, I mostly skipped over that algorithm section! And the Augustine family history chapter.

      From the photos I think I worked out that Humphreys must be in Kent (oast houses), but I’m sure his project would be replicable most places. I wish I was more of a cyclist as it does sound like quite a fun challenge. Often he just stops somewhere and sits for an hour to enjoy the silence and notice more.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. A Life in Books's avatar

        I wish I had the patience to stop and sit for an hour. I’m sure it’s very rewarding.

        Like

  2. Annabel (AnnaBookBel)'s avatar

    I want to read Hill, Matar and Nunez. I’m still slightly allergic to doorstoppers though which is why I still have my copy of The Nix sitting on the shelves!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      The Nix is brilliant; it just pips Wellness for me.

      Like

  3. whatmeread's avatar

    I am avoiding door stoppers right now because I am behind on my reading. I’m trying to shoot through some shorties so I can catch up. I think I’d define door stoppers as more than 500 pages, though.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I can understand that. My progress felt very slow last month, but this month I am adding more novellas and poetry collections to the stack, so maybe it will balance out. I used to say 500+ pages, but anything with 400 or more pages is such a time commitment that I decided to redefine, with the support of a couple of other bloggers here 😉

      Liked by 1 person

      1. whatmeread's avatar

        Novellas! What a good idea!

        Like

  4. Laura's avatar

    As you know, I love a doorstopper! I DNF The Nix so I’m not sure about his second. My Friends appeals to me, but I note your reservations.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      If you didn’t care for The Nix, I can’t see you enjoying his new one. I don’t think you get on with big dysfunctional family novels à la Jonathan Franzen in general?

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Laura's avatar

        I liked Freedom a lot so they can work for me… I can’t remember why I DNF now!

        Like

  5. Kate W's avatar

    I have The Tidal Year and Wellness both on my TBR list… as well as Paul Murray’s The Bee Sting (which I think is 650-odd pages). Having already Demon Copperhead, I think I’ve also made a good start on tackling door-stoppers.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I was leery of The Bee Sting, but after its many accolades and Kim’s enthusiasm, I’m determined to give it a go. I’m in a long library queue for it at the moment.

      Like

  6. MarketGardenReader/IntegratedExpat's avatar

    I can heartily recommend In the Country of Men; The Return is the sequel, when he returns to his homeland.
    Local sounds wonderful, though now he’s done that, he will have to move house so he can repeat the trick. I’m not sure it would work where I live. I’d see boring front gardens or boring industrial estates, roads and boring fields.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Oh, I was thinking The Return is a memoir whereas In the Country of Men is a novel! I will be sure to read them in the correct order.

      Well, he still has nearly 350 squares on that same close-in map that he hasn’t explored in the book! He thought much of what he visited would be boring, and some of it was dispiriting suburbia and trashed land, but there were good surprises, too, and he learned the value of paying attention.

      Like

      1. MarketGardenReader/IntegratedExpat's avatar

        I realise I skipped over the fact that it was an area of 400 squares. It is an intriguing idea to work out where that would take me. I do very much like the idea of the book, made especially fun by the mystery of where he lives, especially as it sounds like Kent, as that’s where both my husband and I come from (different areas).

        Like

  7. Naomi's avatar

    I wonder if making yourself read the doorstoppers helped you ‘get over’ your aversion to them? I was thinking Wellness might qualify for LW… then again, maybe we don’t want such a big book.(?)
    Nunez is on my list of authors to try, but I think I’d start at the beginning.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Wellness would be a good LW pick for sure, but yes, 600 pages is a hard ask!

      I would recommend starting with The Friend, her best known work.

      Liked by 1 person

  8. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    Sometimes I think we just need to allow some time to pass when a reading plan gets thwarted. Stuck on a doorstopper? Read a few short books and try again. Heh Or a year’s worth. I seem to remember that you were reading pandemic fiction straight away, so I can see where, by now, you’re feeling like you’ve had enough. I wasn’t avoiding it, but I only read a couple. You’ve certainly covered lots of the “big” January books here: well done!

    Like

  9. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

    You’ve got me looking forward to Wellness.

    Like

  10. […] Wellness by Nathan Hill: A state-of-the-nation novel filtered through one Chicago family experiencing midlife and marital crises: underperforming academic Jack; his wife Elizabeth, a placebo researcher at Wellness; and their YouTube-obsessed son Toby. They’ve recently invested their life savings in a new condo. The addictive and spot-on novel asks questions about authenticity, purpose, and nurture. Is love itself a placebo? Hill is clearly fascinated with psychological experimentation but also turns it to humorous effect. […]

    Like

  11. […] Wellness by Nathan Hill: A state-of-the-nation story filtered through one Chicago family experiencing midlife and marital crises: underperforming academic Jack; his wife Elizabeth, a placebo researcher at Wellness; and their YouTube-obsessed son Toby. They’ve recently invested their life savings in a new condo. The addictive and spot-on novel asks questions about authenticity, purpose, and nurture. Is love itself a placebo? Hill is clearly fascinated with psychological experimentation but also questions it to humorous effect. […]

    Like

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