Emotionally Weird (Paragon Softcover Large Print Books)

Writer

Kate Atkinson

Language

English

ISBN

9780754024088

Number of pages

448

Publisher

Chivers Large print (Chivers, Windsor, Paragon & C

Category
-
Point : 0
Emotionally Weird (Paragon Softcover Large Print Books)
Add this book to your library

Readers who survive the first 20 pages of this dense and playful novel, with its three different openings, constant jokes, and crowded cast of characters, will find themselves rewarded with a leisurely postmodern romp through the student ferment and bodily indulgences of the early 1970s. Although the publisher has called Emotionally Weird a comic novel, it is essentially unclassifiable, both further-reaching and less "meaningful" than it first appears. Kate Atkinson's book begins with chapter 1 of a bad murder mystery being written by Effie Andrews for a creative-writing course at the University of Dundee in 1972. But the action soon shifts to a wintry island in the Hebrides, where Effie is trying to elicit the story of her parentage from her single mother, Nora, while spinning a humorous first-person narrative of her college life. Only near the end of the book does she finally wrench the story from her Effie's bizarre origins; the identity of her father; and the whole unlikely tale of her mother's family. Like a Borgesian labyrinth, with other stories thrown in, including a laughably convenient introduction of magic realism, it is impossible to know what to take seriously--or "jocoseriously," to paraphrase another of Atkinson's the Joyce of Ulysses and Finnegans Wake . In her third novel, much of Atkinson's humor is incidental, even parenthetical. (We are told in passing, for example, that Effie's dissertation is called "Henry Man or Maze?") She is at her best when introducing her eccentric characters, such as the elderly Professor Cousins, who is sometimes lucid, sometimes not. "As with anyone in the department," Effie explains, "it wasn't always easy to distinguish between the two states. The university's strict laws of tenure dictated that he had to be dead at least three months before he could be removed from behind his desk." Professor Cousins, like the author, enjoys word games along the order of those in Alice in Wonderland , and Atkinson's use of Scottish idiom comes to function as a sort of word game. She also brings in a few killjoys (a militant feminist, a militant Christian, a literary theorist) to complicate an already loopy narrative and to spike the punch. Janice smelt of piety and coal tar soap. She had recently become a Christian, a neophyte of a student Christian fellowship whose members roamed the corridors of Airlie, Belmont and Chalmers Halls looking for likely converts (the afraid, the alone, the abandoned) and those who needed to use the Bible to fill in the spaces where their personalities should have been. As Emotionally Weird develops, Atkinson relies more and more on the postmodern gag of characters commenting on the unfolding action. There is no telling how she finally draws these disparate threads onto a single spool, but in the end, even the slightest subplots are neatly tied up and the most transient characters accounted for. --Regina Marler

Be the first to comment on this book.

Author’s Other Books

Normal Rules Don`t Apply

Normal Rules Don`t Apply

Kate Atkinson
0
One Good Turn

One Good Turn

Kate Atkinson
0
Jackson Brodie Series 4 Books Collection Set By Kate Atkinson (Case Histories, When Will There be Good News?, Big Sky, One Good Turn)

Jackson Brodie Series 4 Books Collection Set By Kate Atkinson (Case Histories, When Will There be Good News?, Big Sky, One Good Turn)

Kate Atkinson
0
Death at the Sign of the Rook: A Jackson Brodie Book (Jackson Brodie Series)

Death at the Sign of the Rook: A Jackson Brodie Book (Jackson Brodie Series)

Kate Atkinson
0
Life After Life: A Novel

Life After Life: A Novel

Kate Atkinson
0
Not The End Of The World

Not The End Of The World

Kate Atkinson
0