Nicotine
A Novel
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- 6,99 €
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- 6,99 €
Publisher Description
One of Huffington Post’s 20 Fall 2016 Books You’ll Need for Your Bookshelf
Featured in New York Magazine’s Fall 2016 Preview
An Entertainment Weekly Fall 2016 Must-Read
Featured in LitHub’s 2016 Bookseller’s Fall Preview
Featured in The Guardian‘s Fall 2016 Books Preview: The Best American Writing
From the “wonderfully talented” (Dwight Garner, New York Times) author of Mislaid and The Wallcreeper comes a fierce and audaciously funny new novel, dazzling in its energy and ambition: a story of obsession, idealism, and ownership, centered around a young woman who inherits her bohemian father’s childhood home.
Recent business school graduate Penny Baker has rebelled against her family her whole life-by being the conventional one. Her mother, Amalia, was a member of an Amazonian tribe called the Kogi; her much older father, Norm, long ago attained cult-like deity status among a certain group of aging hippies while operating a ‘healing center’ in New Jersey. And she’s never felt particularly close to her much-older half-brothers from Norm’s previous marriage-one wickedly charming and obscenely rich (but mostly just wicked), one a photographer on a distant tropical island.
But all that changes when her father dies, and Penny inherits his childhood home in New Jersey. She goes to investigate the property and finds it not overgrown and abandoned, but rather occupied by a group of friendly anarchist squatters whom she finds unexpectedly charming, and who have renamed the property Nicotine House. The residents of Nicotine House (defenders of smokers’ rights) possess the type of passion and fervor Penny feels she’s desperately lacking, and the other squatter houses in the neighborhood provide a sense of community Penny’s never felt before, and she soon moves into a nearby residence, becoming enmeshed in the political fervor and commitment of her fellow squatters.
As the Baker family’s lives begin to converge around the fate of the Nicotine House, Penny grows ever bolder and more desperate to protect it-and its residents-until a fateful night when a reckless confrontation between her old family and her new one changes everything.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Like an oddball singer/songwriter, Nell Zink has a cadence all her own and a way of phrasing things that makes them strange and hypnotic. Penny, the protagonist of Nicotine, has just lost her shaman father and is adrift in the world. Falling in with a crew of anarchist squatters, she’s pushed to define her beliefs and settle on a direction for her life. We can’t really compare Zink’s novel to anything else we’ve read recently or explain exactly why we couldn’t put it down. It just feels really real and current.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Zink's novel of anarchy in life, love, and real estate focuses on Penny Baker, daughter of healing expert and retired shaman Norm Baker, who dies after a prolonged painful illness, leaving behind Penny and her disjointed family. Amalia, Norm's adopted daughter whom he rescued from a Cartagena garbage dump, is also Norm's second wife and Penny's mom. As a not-so-grieving widow, Amalia lusts after hard-hearted Matt, Norm's oldest son from his first marriage. After seeing Norm through his last days, Penny finds herself homeless, unemployed, and haunted by memories. Matt suggests she reclaim the family's neglected Jersey City house, but the house, christened "Nicotine" by the anarchist activist squatters who occupy it, has only one vacant room, and it's filled with toxic waste drums. So Penny moves into another squatter home and visits Nicotine, where she falls for self-proclaimed asexual Rob. In bold strokes, punchy metaphors, and striking imagery, Zink etches her absurdist vision of modern culture, likening Norm's hospice to a brothel licensed as a strip club because customers must ask for what they want in code (such as sex at the brothel, or quick, painless death through drugs at the hospice). Scenes of watching a loved one die and anarchists giving more family support than family add a touching chord to this impertinent, mordant portrait of a corroded society badly in need of reclamation.