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How the Dead Dream
How the Dead Dream | Lydia Millet
2 posts | 3 read | 7 to read
Devoted to money and to ideas of power and political ambition, entrepreneur and former frat boy T. wants to establish himself in real estate in Los Angeles, having spent his life to that point developing his childhood predeliction for charity scams into a highly profitable day-trading regime. His schemes, funded by both his own capital and that of a collection of rich, bored ignorant men whom he cultivates for their wealth, are interrupted by the unexpected appearance of his wretched mother, who comes to live in his bachelor apartment when his father, her husband of thirty years, suddenly disappears. Fragile and half-crazy, she wreaks havoc with his orderly and upwardly mobile life and new girlfriend. Deciding to find his vanished father to demand he talk to T.'s mother, he discovers his father has left the closet and is working a cocktail lounge in Key West. In the wake of his mother's suicide attempt and two other deaths, he finds himself increasingly estranged from the professional world he's chosen. When his largest project, a retirement development in the middle of the desert and as he juggles his family and social responsibilities T. begins to nurture a curious obsession with vanishing species, whose pending extinction he studies. Soon he's living a double life, building sprawling, generic subdivisions in the California desert by day and breaking into zoos at night to be near the animals. When the loss of his closest friend and his mother's dementia leave him isolated he flees to a tropical island, where in the wake of a devastating hurricane he decides to take a river trip into the remote jungle. Millet's coruscating wit, psychological acuity, and linguistic acumen are here deployed to thrilling effect as her remarkable empathy for flawed humankind contends with her vision of a world slowly murdering itself, producing Millet's most knife-edged work yet. How the Dead Dream is the first book of a trilogy.
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Megabooks
How the Dead Dream | Lydia Millet
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What the F did I just read?? Love the cover, but I am so confused!! I was hoping for a character like Gil in her recent novel Dinosaurs, but while I appreciate the arc she wrote for T, I‘m left with many questions. This is the start of a trilogy, and hoopla has this and book three. I‘m torn about whether to buy book two. Her books have a degree of opacity to me, which sometimes I find delightful and other times frustrating. Low pick.

Cinfhen She has such a distinctive voice - I‘ll look to #BorrowNotBuy - thanks for mentioning Hoopla 😁 13mo
Megabooks @Cinfhen she does! Most of her catalog is on hoopla. I‘m thinking of reading this next. 13mo
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Cinfhen Ohhhh!! That must be FASCINATING!!! But I have a real PROBLEM with the NYT antisemitic coverage and yes, I know … the owner is Jewish 🤬😡🤬😡 I‘m afraid this audio will make my blood pressure boil over 13mo
Megabooks @Cinfhen just finished. It was interesting. I understand many people dislike the times, and honestly, I‘m not a subscriber either. HOWEVER!! I love behind the scenes looks at newsrooms and personality conflicts and the whys of coverage decisions. It takes me back to sitting in front page and edit board meetings at my student newspaper. So it definitely delivered on what I was interested in. 👍🏻🫶🏻 13mo
Cinfhen I totally get why you‘d like the premise and THE TIMES is so iconic!! 13mo
Megabooks @Cinfhen and I get why you wouldn‘t want to invest time in a book about an institution you have large scale problems with! 👍🏻 and I feel like I need to go back and read the classic of journalism coverage 13mo
Cinfhen 😘😘😘and yessss to the classic ATPM!!! I‘ve never read the book - I only thought it was a movie 🍿🙈 13mo
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mauveandrosysky
How the Dead Dream | Lydia Millet
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I have to admit I felt ambivalent through the first half of the story, but damn, Millet is such a freaking genius that it feels like a privilege to bear witness to her mind. Her themes and insights leave me in awe. A worthwhile read if you like a good challenge.

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