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Wit's End (2008)

de Karen Joy Fowler

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4742551,697 (3.06)37
What happens when readers steal your characters? Rima Lanisell is about to find out when she visits her estranged godmother, Addison Early, the successful mystery writer of the Maxwell Lane mysteries, and discovers the truth behind Addison's novels.
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Es mostren 1-5 de 25 (següent | mostra-les totes)
Well, I am sure swimming against the tide of opinion on this one, but I LOVED this clever, thoughtful. touching and brilliantly written book.

I should say that, some, if not all, of its problems for haters may be that it has been appallingly handled by its publishers, who clearly had no idea how to make it work in the "let's bash this square peg into a round hold" playbook that passes for book marketing these days. Cover art that misrepresents and trivializes the book and its themes? Check! A title for the UK edition that misrepresents, trivializes AND over-emphasizes one minor part of the whole? Check! Cover blurbs that are about a completely different Karen Joy Fowler book? Well, of course. Why not? Authors write the same book, every time, don't they? There you go, that should ensure that at least 50% of the readers who pick this up are getting something completely different than they were led to expect. You can thank me later ...

In my case, the "something different" was pure, unadulterated delight. Half-expecting a lightly novelized Cluedo scenario, or an upmarket Nancy Drew for adults, I only picked up this book because I was curious about Karen Joy Fowler, who I have heroically avoided reading (except for some of her short fiction) for far too long, and my favorite charity book shop was having a "BOGO" deal. How lucky I am that I can't resist a bargain ...

Why do I love this book? It is beautifully written. Fowler demonstrates an effortless mastery of every aspect of the craft, from word and sentence level, right through to the Big Ticket items, the pacing and structure of the narrative. Characters are sketched in surely and sympathetically. I feel I have known these people, all my life, whether we're talking about major characters like poor lost "adult orphan" Rima, or slightly scary Addison Early (a clever blend of authors who inspire cult-ish fan followings, like Agatha Christie and J.K. Rowling), or the walk-on parts, up to and including the two dachshunds, Berkeley and Stanford. (I will never look at dachshunds in the same way again. I may have to give this book to two friends who are great dachshund lovers ...) The quasi-omniscient narrative voice is pitch-perfect, and sometimes laugh out loud funny.

I love this book because it works on two levels. The first is the meta-level: this is a book about writing, and authorship. Everyone in this book is writing something, whether it's novels, blogs, fanfic, newspaper columns, Wikipeida entries, websites, college term papers, ransom letters or old fashioned snail mail. I don't think I have ever seen it presented so clearly, and so well, that, in these crazy times we live in, everyone is an author. Everyone in the book thinks that he or she has control of the narrative (just ponder that on the meta-level for a second ...), and is the hero of his/her own story. But if everyone is an author, and we can all, literally, "write our own adventure," where does that leave old-fashioned storytelling, and the old-fashioned story tellers like A.B Early, K.J. Fowler, Agatha Christie and J.K. Rowling?

But it also works on the level of character, the personal level. The deaths, one by one, of her mother, brother and father leave Rima, at the tender age of 29, an "orphan," struggling to find herself (or re-invent herself -- again, another sort of authorship), and those struggles feel very real and true, and beautifully rendered, to me. But perhaps I should confess that nine years ago, when I was a bit older than 29, I found myself in Rima's position, when my only, younger brother suddenly and unexpectedly passed away. Suddenly, no Mom (since 1996), no Dad (since 2003) ... and no one to phone me on our long-deceased grandmother's birthday (just to rub it in that he remembered, and I never did). No one to remember squeezing ourselves into the tiny "way back" of our Dad's VW, and the time the heat got stuck on HI, and we almost died of heatstroke. No one to reassure me that the beagle who chewed up all our Mom's shoes was really found a wonderful new home, on a farm upstate, no matter what anyone else says ...

So, yeah, it worked on the personal level for me. You can only find out if it works for you, if you try it ... ( )
  maura853 | Jul 11, 2021 |
Rima has lost her entire family in a series of unrelated tragedies, so she goes to stay for a while with her godmother Addison, an extremely popular mystery writer, even though Addison and Rima's father had been estranged for years before he died. While there, she has imaginary conversations with Addison's detective character, encounters an (extremely minor) actual mystery, and asks some questions about her family's past. Well, not so much asks questions, really, as plays detective in a vague, half-assed kind of way instead of just coming out and asking what she wants to know.

It's very hard to know what to make of this book. It's written in a slightly quirky, intermittently omniscient style that I sometimes found a little bit fun, and sometimes mildly irritating. I suspect which moments were which probably depended a lot more on my own changing mood than on the book itself, though. It did occur to me, in a less charitable moment, to wonder whether the style was meant to distract us from the fact that very little was actually happening, and that the supposed mysteries weren't particularly interesting. Well, maybe, maybe not. I think Fowler is trying to do something a bit meta, something that perhaps subverts a bunch of mystery tropes, and I often really enjoy that sort of thing when it's done well, but in this case, I'm left sort of wondering that the point of it all was. It was never a chore to read, moments of irritation notwithstanding, but nothing about it feels satisfying, either.

It also doesn't help that it was published in 2008, and it's chock full of rants about the politics of the George W. Bush era, which is something that feels so distant, so almost quaint compared to everything we're going through today that it just enhanced my feeling of disconnection from it all. (Also not helping: the fact that it's mildly laced with 9/11 conspiracy theories, and I have even less patience with conspiracy theories of any political stripe now than I did then, and also the fact that a lot of the backstory revolves around white supremacists, and nobody seems much bothered by them at all. Yeah, basically, this whole novel has aged like milk when it comes to the political stuff.) ( )
  bragan | Mar 30, 2021 |
This book is truly a product of imagination which made it a refreshing read. Rima Lansill is 29 and adrift -- her father has recently died, capping off a string of losses for Rima -- her mother when she was young, her brother, Oliver in a drunk driving accident in her early twenties, and now her dad. She says "The thing people don't understand about grief is you don't just feel sad. You feel crazy." Thus she pegs herself as a somewhat unreliable character whose occasional point of view comes into question. Rima washes up at Wit's End (the former name of) her godmother's Santa Cruz home on the edge of the ocean. Addison Early is a serial murder mystery writer, featuring books about Maxwell Lane, ace detective. Before she writes a book, she first constructs the murder in miniature, creating macabre dollhouse dioramas which are scattered throughout her home. Addison was a friend of Rima's father, Bim, pre-dating his marriage, but the nature of which, Rima has never been sure. Raised in Ohio, Rima has not had much contact with Addison and has only overheard scraps of conversation to pair with her. While at Wit's End (ha, ha), Rima begins to heal her grief, befriends Scorch and Cody, Addison's twenty-something dog-walkers, and "dates" Martin, Addison's housekeeper's son. It all sounds convoluted, and it is, but an omniscient, and wry narrator helps to fill in the blanks and unravel the puzzle. This is essentially a mystery within a mystery-writer's book. What exactly were Addison and Bim to each other 30 years ago? Why exactly did Addison name one of her murderous characters after Rima's father? What is the connection with the 60s cult at nearby Holy City? Rima's pursuit of solving this conundrum helps her find healing and belonging and peace. A fun read, if a little disjointed and confusing at times. ( )
  CarrieWuj | Oct 24, 2020 |
I love the 3 previous Fowler books I've read ([b:Sarah Canary|2291494|Sarah Canary|Karen Joy Fowler|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1213672300s/2291494.jpg|1598772], [b:The Science of Herself|20352816|The Science of Herself|Karen Joy Fowler|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1409616944s/20352816.jpg|24756515], [b:We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves|16176440|We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves|Karen Joy Fowler|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1364850195s/16176440.jpg|22026398]) and so I was hoping this would be a light, fun audiobook I could intersperse with my other reading. Sad to say, it didn't work that way for me. Fowler's lovely writing and sly humor are here and the audio reader was fine, but the story felt both dawdling and fluffy, a fatal combination.
  badube | Mar 6, 2019 |
Fun, fluffy and a little bit complex. Great weekend reading. I doubt I'll remember the plot in a month. ( )
  laurenbufferd | Nov 14, 2016 |
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It seems only fair that I live with the people I've killed.

A. B. Early, interview with Ms. Magazine, June 1983
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Published in the U.S. as "Wit's End" and in the U.K as "The Case of the Imaginary Detective".
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What happens when readers steal your characters? Rima Lanisell is about to find out when she visits her estranged godmother, Addison Early, the successful mystery writer of the Maxwell Lane mysteries, and discovers the truth behind Addison's novels.

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