The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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No One Is Talking About This
Booker Prize for Fiction
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2021 Booker Longlist - No One is Talking About This
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Neil
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Aug 27, 2021 01:54AM

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I had the same reaction there - if this is the future of the novel then the novel really is dead - which of course it isn't, i.e. it's me not the book.

(*) I know we are GenX so this doesn’t work but as I am GenX and you are older than me I think if you as a Boomer



And one is random drivel about silly memes and makes one despair of our civilisation as well as the future of the novel.


I'm making it sound like I hated the novel, or even had strong feeling about it, which isn't the case.
To me her biggest achievement is replicating in literary terms the concept of a meme. Writing a book that gets a lot of attention for a short period, but a few weeks later is forgotten and looking back no one can remember what all the fuss was about. Although I am not sure if that was the intention.



One of the members noted, as Eli did upthread, the generosity that Lockwood brings to her depiction of social media and the people who use it. Such a refreshing contrast to some of the more scolding takes on social media I’ve read recently (Flanagan).
I agree with those who have noted that participation in any online community, including this Goodreads group, is probably enough to allow you to appreciate the first half of the book. Several folks in my book club were not frequent Twitter users and had no idea the references were even real and still found the first half hilarious and rewarding.
I’m glad folks seemed to have moved beyond the critique of the book as “two books” that could somehow have existed without each other. I never understood that, as I think the whole point is the radical change the protagonist goes through in shifting from one mindset to the other.
Ultimately, I think Lockwood is making the point that all forms of human existence are beautiful and have value. You might pour decades of your life into participating in an online community that some would decry as purile. Or, to paraphrase the part of the book that has most stuck with me, you might show up for a little while and listen to some music. (If someone could find that quote for me, I would be most grateful. I gave my copy to a book club mate.)

I didn’t like it as much as some, but I think it’s worthy of its Booker listing.
Is the quote your thinking of in the first or second half of the book, Nicholas?

Indeed “can a dog be twins” would probably have sufficed.

“…the club pressed against her and she thought of Little Touch; her eyes traveled to all the places she was kissed, places all over the world. She wondered was it worth it to show up, hear a little music, and then leave?”
That is very touching, Nicholas, and it is a great example of the nuggets of wisdom buried in a book about the social media universe and the real world.

And the babies eyes are permanently open due to her condition (the family taking at the surgeons advice the decision to reject the operation to correct this) - I think the links with the narrators wide eyed absorption in the first half of all of the stimuli of the portal are clear.
The listening to the music also links to the foot piano the family discover late on as a way for the baby to make her own music. As an aside the author and her niece with this item as well as with the Pom Pom featured in the book can be seen in a picture at the bottom of this interview
https://www.guernicamag.com/miscellan...
And of course the niece showed up only for a little while but it was still a hugely meaningful time for their family. Had the state of Ohio permitted abortion (something her father opposed all his life only to have his faith struck to the core - at the same time of course the narrator and author has her own rejection of the oppressive faith of her childhood shaken to its core as she moves away from atheism) the baby possibly would not have shown up at all but the sister’s life would have not been severely endangered and the family not have had the emotional torment of the baby’s few months of suffering - but they also would not have had the experience of meeting her.
While travelling all over the world links to the narrators travels both with her meme-fame and with her husband taking in both Joyce and Woolf.
And as Nicholas says it can all link back to social media participation.
That’s all in two short sentences.





I thought the misspelling was "sneaze."


It doesn't seem to be in all editions, though. As GY says, the funniest outcome would be that a very conscientious employee at the publisher has noticed i and corrected it.



I wanted to address the fear that this is the “future of the novel”. I really don’t think it is.
I think there are certain similarities between this and books like Ducks, Newburyport - both somewhat experimental in form, both terminally online in attention span and subject matter. I think that American fiction has been forced in many ways to reconcile its relationship to the internet and too much information, whether that be through autofiction and the porousness between life and information, or in the case of this essentially meaningless internet drivel. I think this book does the latter, and tries to reconcile it. Ultimately, I think this book is mainly a period piece of a specific cultural moment, and while I understand most of the references and “get it”, I kept imagining trying to read it without getting any of it, a sort of Finnegan’s Wake piece if someone tried reading it 20 years from now. Ultimately, I liked this book because reading it, it already felt dated to me. I don’t anticipate this to be the future of the novel, just an aside.

The (different) host of the programmes Neil and I were on was also a big fan of this novel

But just in case I've already prepared my reaction meme should I find it has won
https://twitter.com/nocontexthearn/st...

I do think with this book and the other two that I mentioned that readers not familiar with their references (and, in this case, pretty regular social media usage), would be somewhat lost.
Mostly, I liked how the writing embodied the cognitive dissonance of social media and 21st century life (being present/not present in your own life, having extremely personal or emotional experiences/stories right up alongside the frivolous or vulgar, the blurring of life as private and performative, etc.).

Although fortunately not quite as bad as either of those (which would be some feat to achieve)
But it got me back into Binch biscuits, so not all bad


Cindy, if I read just one more book from this year's shortlist, is there one you'd recommend?

So you will not be surprised that
I also adored Ducks (albeit not the author's wider views and comments or her publisher's reaction to not winning)
I was very uninterested by the The Sellout
The Sellout

Exactly

Cindy, if I read just one more book from this year's shortlist, is there one you'd recommend?"
A lot of pressure on that question Marc. My second favorite on the list is Bewilderment, which was a surprise for me because I have not loved Powers' other novels. It has certainly divided opinions among the members of this group. In terms of the novel that was (after the Lockwood) the most thought-provoking, that would be The Promise.

So you will not be surprised that
I also adored Ducks..."
It makes me happy to have our reading interests aligned again, GY. When I agree more with your brother than with you, something seems out of kilter.


I agree. And her interview on Front Row only reinforced my sense of this.

I was touched by the second half but ultimately felt a bit exploited by it. I found it a bit morally dubious to use your dead neice to make points about the Internet.
I love Sam's analysis of what "can a dog be twins?" is all about though!

I am neither, but I totally agree.

Edited to correct valid to vapid!

Though imagine being embarrassed by "Seven Nation Army" and not being embarrassed by half the nonsense in this book...

But just in case I've already prepared my reaction meme should I find it has won
https://twitter.com/nocontexthearn/st..."
Patricia Lockwood replied with a tweet meme of her own with her detailed reviews of the other 5 on the shortlist
https://twitter.com/NoContextHearn/st...
(Disclaimer - she didn't, but if she were up to speed with the memes of sons of snooker promoters who now run boxing, I'm sure she would have done)
Books mentioned in this topic
Ducks, Newburyport (other topics)The Sellout (other topics)
No One Is Talking About This (other topics)
Fear of Flying (other topics)
On the Road (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Patricia Lockwood (other topics)Jenny Offill (other topics)
Patricia Lockwood (other topics)