Yesteryear
-
-
2,0 • 1 betyg
-
-
- 135,00 kr
Utgivarens beskrivning
THE SUNDAY TIMES NUMBER ONE BESTSELLER
'EVERYONE WILL BE TALKING ABOUT THIS BOOK’ – BELLA MACKIE
'NIGHTMARISH, SHOCKING, BRILLIANT’ – STYLIST
'MADDENING, MESMERISING, INGENIOUS’ – NEW YORK TIMES
'INTELLIGENT, INCISIVE, INSANELY READABLE’ – JENNIE GODFREY
'DERANGED, DARING, CLEVERLY WRITTEN’ – VOGUE
'My name is Natalie Heller Mills, and I was perfect at being alive…'
Natalie lives a traditional lifestyle – and her followers are sick with envy. Her charming farmhouse on her working ranch is artfully cluttered, her husband is a handsome cowboy, her homemade sourdough boules are each more beautiful than the last. So what if there are nannies and producers and industrial-grade ovens behind the scenes? What her followers don’t know won’t hurt them.
Then, one morning, Natalie wakes up in a strange, horrible version of reality. Her home, her husband, her children—they’re all familiar, but something’s off. Is this a hoax? A reality show? A test from God? Natalie knows just two things for sure: this isn't her perfect life, and she must escape, by any means possible.
As darkly funny as it is shocking and gripping, Yesteryear is an electrifying examination of tradition, fame, faith and the grand performance of womanhood, from a thrilling new talent in fiction.
NOW BEING ADAPTED INTO A MAJOR FILM STARRING ANNE HATHAWAY
‘WICKEDLY FUNNY, FRIGHTENINGLY PERCEPTIVE' ABIGAIL DEAN
'INVENTIVE, ADDICTIVE, A WILD RIDE' ASHLEY AUDRAIN
'SHOT THROUGH WITH HUMOUR, LACED WITH DARKNESS' CLARE MACKINTOSH
'THE STEPFORD WIVES MEETS THE HANDMAID'S TALE' HANNAH DEITCH
About the author
Caro Claire Burke received her Master’s in Fine Arts from the Bennington Writing Seminars. She is the co-host of Diabolical Lies, a politics and culture podcast. Yesteryear is her first novel.
Kundrecensioner
Not very well written
Apart from a clear case of postpartum depression and a truly unhappy person and mentally ill person, (irrespective of religious beliefs or cultural background)... this didn't make sense.
The book is pushed as a time-travel-karma-lesson-for-an obnoxious-tradwife... but after a while it just feels cruel. I'm torn between not finishing the book because it became predictable way too fast, and sympathising with the emotional suffering that this human being is going through.
I definitely need more books about the strength that women have to have, in order to fake normality and get through a life they didn't get to choose... but this isn't it.
I can't decide if the author is writing in the tone of some sophisticated sarcasm or if this is just a really bad thrashing of a different lifestyle?
(Don't get me wrong, I am the absolute opposite of a trad-wife and am in no way promoting it.)
Interesting idea, not particularly well executed and I would not recommend this book to others.