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The Answers - by Catherine Lacey (Paperback)

The Answers - by  Catherine Lacey (Paperback)
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Last Price: 12.79 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><b>Named to Most Anticipated and Must Read lists by <i>Huffington Post</i>, <i> W</i>, <i> Nylon</i>, <i> Elle, Buzzfeed</i> and<i> Chicago Reader</i></b> <p/><b>Written by one of <i>Granta</i>'s Best Young American Novelists, Catherine Lacey's <i>The Answers</i> is a </b><b>novel of intellect and amplitude that deepens as it moves forward (<i>The New York Times</i>) about a woman learning to negotiate her ailment via the simulacrum of a perfect romantic relationship. </b> <p/>Mary Parsons is broke. Dead broke, really: between an onslaught of medical bills and a mountain of credit card debt, she has been pushed to the brink. Hounded by bill collectors and still plagued by the painful and bizarre symptoms that doctors couldn't diagnose, Mary seeks relief from a holistic treatment called Pneuma Adaptive Kinesthesia--PAKing, for short. Miraculously, it works. But PAKing is prohibitively expensive. Like so many young adults trying to make ends meet in New York City, Mary scours Craigslist and bulletin boards for a second job, and eventually lands an interview for a high-paying gig that's even stranger than her symptoms or the New Agey PAKing. <p/>Mary's new job title is Emotional Girlfriend in the "Girlfriend Experiment"--the brainchild of a wealthy and infamous actor, Kurt Sky, who has hired a team of biotech researchers to solve the problem of how to build and maintain the perfect romantic relationship, casting himself as the experiment's only constant. Around Kurt, several women orbit as his girlfriends with specific functions. There's a Maternal Girlfriend who folds his laundry, an Anger Girlfriend who fights with him, a Mundanity Girlfriend who just hangs around his loft, and a whole team of girlfriends to take care of Intimacy. With so little to lose, Mary falls headfirst into Kurt's messy, ego-driven simulacrum of human connection. <p/>Told in Catherine Lacey's signature spiraling, hypnotic prose, <i>The Answers</i> is both a mesmerizing dive into the depths of one woman's psyche and a critical look at the conventions and institutions that infiltrate our most personal, private moments. As Mary struggles to understand herself--her body, her city, the trials of her past, the uncertainty of her future--the reader must confront the impossible questions that fuel Catherine Lacey's work: How do you measure love? Can you truly know someone else? Do we even know ourselves? And listen for Lacey's uncanny answers.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p><b>Praise for <i>The Answers</i></b> <p/>Lacey's sentences are long and clean and unstanchable . . . she sweeps you up in the formidable current of her thought, and then she drops you down the rabbit hole. She's the real thing, and in <i>The Answers </i>she takes full command of her powers . . . This is a novel of intellect and amplitude that deepens as it moves forward, until you feel prickling awe at how much mental territory unfolds . . . Lacey's special gift is for capturing the realistic flickering of individual consciousness. --Dwight Garner, <i>New York Times</i> <p/><i>The Answers</i> is in part a sparkling satire of our era of big data . . . But the novel is also a poignant spiritual lament, deepening the themes of Ms. Lacey's excellent debut, <i>Nobody Is Ever Missing </i>. . . [Lacey's] searching, religious dimensions add to the fresh commentary on present-day godheads to make <i>The Answers</i> not just one of the most ingenious novels of 2017 but also one of the most moving. --Sam Sacks, <i>Wall Street Journal</i> <p/>This is Lacey's specialty: She captures with eerie precision the strangeness of being a person in the world, living alongside other human beings with unknowable thoughts and feelings . . . Reading Lacey's fiction feels like walking through a dark apartment in someone's mind, full of winding hallways and unmarked doors. You never know quite where you are or where you'll end up. --Joy Press, <i>Los Angeles Times</i> <p/>Haunting . . . [<i>The Answers </i>is] a quiet, calm, somewhat circuitous rumination on what we miss and miss out on when our connections to other human beings are synthetic. And it serves as a reminder that sometimes the fiction that feels most relevant to a hallucinatory political moment is not itself overtly political . . . A thoughtful, complex, feminist book that artfully mines the fun-house insanity of 21st century American womanhood by a uniquely talented writer who knows not to put forth any answers, only more questions. --Nina Renata Aron, <i>The</i> <i>New Republic</i> <p/>Such an inventive setup isn't merely an excuse for Lacey to show off her considerable inventiveness. It also allows her to dig into some fertile philosophical ground, raising questions to which the novel, against its title and like all good art, offers no final answers . . . Love is a strange, strange thing, and so is the self. No one in contemporary fiction does a better job of showing us these facts than Catherine Lacey. --Anthony Domestico, <i>Boston Globe</i> <p/>Catherine Lacey's dating dystopia <i>The Answers</i> is this summer's must-read novel . . . A darkly funny, tartly feminist look at the tender state of our bodies and souls in the Information Age . . . [Lacey's] work manages to be both conceptual and human, socially aware and mordant--think DeLillo for millennials--[and it] captures the absurdity of a culture that persists in thinking that enlightenment is a matter of the right purchase, hashtag, or Google search. --Megan O'Grady, <i>Vogue</i><br><i><br></i>The genius of Catherine Lacey lies in the fact that her new book, <i>The Answers, </i> doesn't feel like too much; the pieces are bizarre and timely and fit together like puzzle pieces into a somehow timeless examination of humanity . . . Lacey's prose radiates elegance beneath its unassuming, unflashy surface; there's nary a maladroit word or an unrevealing detail. She skillfully balances a truly absurd array of hot-button topics and weird narrative twists, playing them off each other virtuosically to weave a surreal-feeling story with deeply pragmatic concerns. --Claire Fallon, <i>Huffington Post</i> <p/>Catherine Lacey examines, with clinical chill and precision, late-capitalism's perversions of love . . . <i>The Answers</i> cinches [Lacey's previous accolades] while forging new narrative territory. It's more plot-driven and ruthless than <i>Nobody Is Ever Missing</i>, a world more familiar with the carnal cruelty of a Mary Gaitskill story than Adler's aphoristic prose . . . --J. Jezewska Stevens, <i>BOMB</i> <p/>Complex and haunting . . . Masterful . . . Lacey writes loneliness and solitude with a profound depth, injecting life into the anxious fluttering of those wondering, wandering individuals who just don't know what to do with themselves and who can't stop asking life's most impenetrable questions. --Laura Adamcyzyk, <i>The A.V. Club</i> <p/>[<i>The Answers</i>] directs [its] energy into an unpredictable, layered plot that will likely take most readers by surprise . . . For Lacey's remarkable skill to be fully embraced, we may need a new genre to categorize her work under . . . Her sentences are like reading an iconic prose style before it's become iconic. --Joshua James Amberson, <i>Los Angeles Review of Books</i> <p/>For a novel that's so cerebral, <i>The Answers</i> is impressively tightly plotted and Lacey's prose notably refined in its lucidity. It's an exciting and clever follow-up to her acclaimed debut, <i>Nobody Is Ever Missing</i>, and testifies to her inclusion on Granta's recent best of young American novelists list . . . <i>T</i><i>he Answers</i> is an unsettling, but whip-smart meditation on love, intimacy and contemporary female experience, minus the fairytale ending. --Lucy Scholes, <i>The Independent </i> <p/>Catherine Lacey is one of the most intelligent and brittle and funny writers of her generation. In <i>The Answers</i>, she builds--out of the raw stuff of bewilderment and absence--a soaring, heartbreaking work that's just on the right side of being nearly too beautiful to bear. --Lauren Groff, author of <i>Fates and Furies</i> <p/>Remarkable . . . Lacey displays an exceptional ability to articulate the elusiveness of knowing others, as well as the desire to find meaning and trust within. --<i>Publishers Weekly </i>(starred review) <p/>Startling and stunning and compulsively strange, Lacey's sophomore novel is a haunting investigation into the nature of love . . . With otherworldly precision and subtle wit, Lacey creates a gently surreal dreamscape that's both intoxicating and profound. A singular novel; as unexpected as it is rich. --<i>Kirkus </i>(starred review) <p/>Lacey is particularly attuned to the emotional elasticity of her female characters, especially as they face problems that can <i>feel</i> physically taxing . . . [She] makes it easy to believe women, which has been, as we all know, perhaps the hardest thing to do from a narrative standpoint at any particular time in history . . . Lacey manages to entertain us as she makes a point about women on the fringe. --Kaitlin Phillips, <i>Bookforum</i> <p/>An adept novel . . . Lacey digs into the choppy turf beneath a woman's relationship to her body, her identity and her search for balance between independence and meaningful relationships . . . Lacey doesn't give us answers, but she sure gives us a wild story with a memorable protagonist. --<i>Shelf Awareness</i> <p/>Surreal, thought-provoking, and intriguingly untidy --<i>Booklist</i></p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Catherine Lacey</b> is the author of <i>Nobody Is Ever Missing</i>, winner of a 2016 Whiting Award and a finalist for the New York Public Library's Young Lions Fiction Award, and <i>The Answers</i>. In 201, she was named one of <i>Granta</i>'s Best Young American Novelists. Her essays and fiction have been published widely and translated into Italian, French, Dutch, Spanish, and German. Born in Mississippi, she is now based in Chicago.

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