Clam Down
A Metamorphosis
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- $17.99
Publisher Description
In this wondrously unusual memoir, a woman retreats into her shell in the aftermath of her divorce, and must choose between the pleasures and the perils of a closed-up life—a transformation fable from an acclaimed 5 Under 35 National Book Foundation honoree.
“A marvel and a delight . . . This is a book that will stay with me forever.”—Leslie Jamison, author of Splinters
ONE OF CHICAGO TRIBUNE’S TEN BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR • A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: VULTURE, ELECTRIC LIT, SHELF AWARENESS
We’ve all heard the story about waking up as a cockroach—but what if a crisis turned you into a clam? After the dissolution of her marriage, a writer is transformed into a “clam” via typo after her mother keeps texting her to “clam down.” The funny if unhelpful command forces her to ask what it means to “clam down”—to retreat, hide, close up, and stay silent. Idiomatically, we are said to “clam up” when we can’t speak, and to “come out of our shell” when we reemerge, transformed.
In order to understand her path, the clam digs into examples of others who have embraced lives of reclusiveness and extremity. Finally, she confronts her own “clam genealogy” to interview her dad, who disappeared for a decade to write a mysterious accounting software called Shell Computing. By excavating his past to better understand his decisions, she learns not only how to forgive him but also how to move on from her own wounds of abandonment and insecurity.
Using a genre-defying structure and written in novelistic prose that draws from art, literature, and natural history, Anelise Chen unfolds a complex story of interspecies connectedness, in which humans learn lessons of adaptation and survival from their mollusk kin. While it makes sense in certain situations to retreat behind fortified walls, the choice to do so also exacts a price. What is the price of building up walls? How can one take them back down when they are no longer necessary?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Novelist and Columbia University creative writing professor Chen (So Many Olympic Exertions) serves up an offbeat memoir inspired by her mother's habitual misspelling of "calm down" as "clam down" in text messages. After the end of Chen's marriage, her mother's inadvertent typo prompted introspection about Chen's tendencies to retreat, self-protect, and stay silent. "Was becoming a clam a kind of wish fulfillment, or was it a curse that prevented her from acting out, from getting angry," Chen wonders (she refers to herself in the third person as "the clam" throughout). To better understand the clam as a symbol, Chen weaves in scientific research and analyzes literary and artistic depictions of mollusks in works including Italo Calvino's Comsicomics and painter Hubbard Lathard Fordham's Portrait of Shellfish. Along the way, she confronts the cracks in her marriage and considers what timidity she may have inherited from her father, who disappeared for 10 years during Chen's childhood to develop a software in Tawain called Shell Computing. Chen's surreal tone and dry humor ("Whether there were certain aspects of clamhood that would render her unfit for modern life: that was still to be seen") elevate this above similar tales of self-discovery. For readers willing to take the plunge, it's a treat.