Last Night in Montreal
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
From the bestselling author of Station Eleven and Sea of Tranquility—when Lilia Albert was a child, her father appeared on the doorstep of her mother's house and took her away. Now, haunted by an inability to remember much about her early childhood, Lilia moves restlessly from city to city, abandoning lovers and eluding the private detective who has dedicated a career to following close behind.
Then comes Eli. When Lilia goes out for a paper and fails to return to their Brooklyn apartment, he follows her to Montreal, not knowing whether he wants to disappear, too, or help her find her way home. But what he discovers is a deeper mystery, one that will set past and present spinning toward collision.
Look for Emily St. John Mandel’s bestselling new novel, Sea of Tranquility!
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Cross a languid love story with a gripping game of cat and mouse, weave in a haunting mystery, and, voilà, that’s Last Night in Montreal. Shifting between edgy Brooklyn and the charming francophone city, and between past and present, Emily St. John Mandel’s memorable debut focuses on heartbroken academic Eli and Lilia, the girlfriend who abandoned him. As Eli follows the bread crumbs she left behind, we’re drawn into Lilia’s startling and fragmented personal history. Mandel cleverly mixes the idea of unreliable memory with the deception of deliberately kept secrets. Her novel suggests that how we feel about people and events might be the only thing that can be pinned down.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A young woman with a habit of running away runs away yet again in Mandel's competent if unremarkable debut. As Eli finishes another grim day of work on his thesis (its topic: dead and dying languages) in his Brooklyn apartment, he realizes his girlfriend, Lilia, never returned after going out for the newspaper that morning. About a month later, Eli gets a postcard from someone named Michaela in Montreal telling him that Lilia is there, so he heads north, leaving (thankfully) his insufferable friends behind to natter on about art without him. His quest is interspersed with flashbacks to Lilia's childhood: her father kidnaps her at age seven from her mother's house, and the two go on the lam. Back in present-day Montreal, Eli meets Michaela, who happens to be the daughter of the detective who years ago worked on Lilia's abduction case, and together they try to fill in the blanks of Lilia's past. While the plot is interesting enough, the prose often feels forced and the characters sometimes amount to accumulations of quirks, whimsies and neuroses. An intriguing idea, but the delivery isn't quite there.