Review by Booklist Review
Denny's father forgoes treatment when his cancer returns for a third bout. Upon receiving this news, Denny launches her version of a meltdown from a life that was already disassociated and solitary. She gets herself fired by releasing the flies she's paid to grow in six-week life cycles for scientific study. Then she gives notice on her apartment lease, sells her car for a truck, and moves to a remote cabin in the woods with her imaginary friend, Gene. Goldblatt's debut invites readers to bear witness to Denny's attempt to avoid her life, though Denny fails even at this. At times the novel can feel a bit directionless, which is fitting for Denny's current status: things just seem to happen to Denny. She's visited by animals and people and weather, all of which thwart her disengagement plan and eventually send her back to her father, changed by the woods. Goldblatt's spare and illuminating language suits her protagonist, who spends a good deal of time lonely inside her own head and experience.--Emily Dziuban Copyright 2019 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Goldblatt's propulsive and beguiling debut tracks the story of a young woman searching for escape. Twenty-something Denny, short for Denise, has watched her father suffer on and off from cancer for 10 years and moves through her days in a fog of half-hope and half-grief, "working on the idea of being alive." She works a quiet job in a genetics lab and spends most nights alone in her studio apartment in the Washington, D.C., suburbs, socializing only with her high school best friend Ken and her imaginary friend, Gene, an amalgam of classic movie--character clichés. But when her father's cancer returns, and Denny learns he won't be seeking treatment, Denny decides to take time off and rent a cabin deep in the woods, leaving no word with the people she leaves behind. Cut off from civilization, the unexpected becomes the everyday, and Denny's inner turmoil is matched by the brutality she must endure to survive, particularly after a storm downs a tree that tears open the roof and exposes her to the elements--and even more so when she discovers that she might not be alone out there. Denny's story gains momentum early on, though the secondary characters too often come across as one-note, muddled shapes in the background. Still, this debut is a striking psychological portrait of despair. (Aug.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
When terror about the future intersects with the anticipated death of a loved one, many people act out in previously unimaginable ways.For 30-something only child Denny, finding out that her father has been diagnosed with cancer for the third time sends her into a complete meltdown. This is compounded by the fact that he has decided to forego treatmentno chemo, no radiation, just in-home hospice care. When Denny learns this, she unravels, but she does so without tears, pleadings, or prayer. Instead, the unwelcome news leads her to sabotage her job at a laboratory, and, after getting fired, she decides to vanish, telling no one where she is headed. Her new home, a remote cabin on a distant mountaintop, lacks electricity and is heated only by a wood fireplace. There are no nearby neighbors or stores, and she must bring enough food with her to last for the duration of her stayprojected at a year. To say that this is a challenge for someone who has never lived outside the Washington, D.C., suburbs is an understatement. Nonetheless, Denny wants this, badly. Or thinks she does. At times, Gene, an imaginary friend she has had since age 14, pops up and offers quips, advice, or opinions. Then he, too, vanishes, and despite Denny's purported desire for solitude, after a horrible storm destroys the cabin's roof, she is both relieved and frightened to find a mysterious man named Haw in her front yard. Haw is simultaneously menacing and appealing, and it doesn't take long for Denny to become entangled with him. Suffice it to say that the love-hate relationship that unfolds is not for the faint of heart. There's violence and cruelty, all of it matter-of-factly described, with Denny betraying little-to-no emotion about the circumstances she faces.By turns creepy and thought-provoking, this is a resonant debut about love, independence, and mourning. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review