Misrecognition
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
For fans of Rachel Cusk and Patricia Lockwood, a “shockingly modern and honest debut” (Julia May Jones, author of Vladimir) about the internet, post-postmodern adulthood, and a young woman discovering her queer identity.
Elsa is struggling. Her formative, exhilarating relationship—with a couple—has abruptly ended, leaving her depressed and directionless in her childhood bedroom. The man and the woman were her bosses, lovers, and cultural guideposts. In the relationship’s wake, Elsa scrolls aimlessly through the internet in search of meaning.
Faithfully her screen provides a new obsession: a charismatic young actor whose latest feature is a gay love story that illuminates Elsa’s crisis. And then, as if she had conjured him, Elsa sees the actor in the flesh; he and an entourage of actors, writers, and directors have descended upon her hometown for the annual theater festival. When she is hired as a hostess at the one upscale restaurant in town, Elsa finds herself in frequent contact with the actor and his collaborators. But her obsession shifts from the actor to his frequent dinner companion—an alluring, androgynous person called Sam. As this confusing connection develops, Elsa is forced to grapple with her sexuality, the uncomfortable truths about the dramatic end of her last relationship, and the patterns that may be playing out once again.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Newbound debuts with the underwhelming story of a 20-something woman's failure to launch. Elsa has recently moved back from New York City to her parents' house in the Hudson Valley, having been dumped and fired by the artist couple she was sleeping with and working for. Now, Elsa spends a lot of time scrolling through social media and roaming around her small hometown, trying to shake her feelings for the unnamed couple. Eventually she takes a hostess job at a restaurant, where she becomes enamored with a celebrity guest (details suggest Timothee Chalamet) and his companions who are in town for a theater festival. Soon her attention shifts to the actor's friend, an androgynous person named Sam. The novel shows glimmers of life when Sam enters the picture, taking Elsa to a swimming hole and later to a party for the festival, but the first half is bogged down with overwritten and repetitive depictions of Elsa's feelings. Here's hoping Newbound's next outing will make better use of her intriguing themes.