Imagine Me Gone

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Adam Haslett: Imagine Me Gone (2016, Little, Brown and Company)

Published Sept. 10, 2016 by Little, Brown and Company.

ISBN:
978-0-316-26135-7
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4 stars (7 reviews)

6 editions

Review of 'Imagine me gone' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I’m not a fan of rotating first-person narrators, which made this hard to embrace. Further, it doesn’t offer a character in particular to like—just a bunch of broken adults doing their best. It centers around eldest sibling Michael, who reminds me of Ignatius J. Reilly without the ironic distance. We’re supposed to love him despite his many failings, but it’s a challenge. The writing is at times overly impressed with its cleverness, but it’s scattered with observations and insights so incisive and well formed that they make it (mostly) worth the struggle.

Review of 'Imagine Me Gone' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This book was intense.

Intimate first-person narratives do the story a world of good. John's dread, his fugue state; the all-consuming nature of Michael's predicament - powerfully written. Partly the reason it took me so long to get through this book.

Will definitely be reading it again, some time.

(h/t Dipali for the recommendation.)

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