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Nobody Is Ever Missing
Nobody Is Ever Missing: A Novel | Catherine Lacey
Without telling her family, Elyria takes a one-way flight to New Zealand, abruptly leaving her stable but unfulfilling life in Manhattan. As her husband scrambles to figure out what happened to her, Elyria hurtles into the unknown, testing fate by hitchhiking, tacitly being swept into the lives of strangers, and sleeping in fields, forests, and public parks. Her risky and often surreal encounters with the people and wildlife of New Zealand propel Elyria deeper into her deteriorating mind. Haunted by her sister's death and consumed by an inner violence, her growing rage remains so expertly concealed that those who meet her sense nothing unwell. This discord between her inner and outer reality leads her to another obsession: If her truest self is invisible and unknowable to others, is she even alive? The risks Elyria takes on her journey are paralleled by the risks Catherine Lacey takes on the page. In urgent, spiraling prose she whittles away at the rage within Elyria and exposes the very real, very knowable anxiety of the human condition. And yet somehow Lacey manages to poke fun at her unrelenting self-consciousness, her high-stakes search for the dark heart of the self. In the spirit of Haruki Murakami and Amelia Gray, Nobody Is Ever Missing is full of mordant humor and uncanny insights, as Elyria waffles between obsession and numbness in the face of love, loss, danger, and self-knowledge.
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review
ClairesReads
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Mehso-so

An introspective novel about the narrator‘s mental unravelling as she steps out of her everyday life. There were some insightful moments where Lacey had interesting things to say about grief and how it makes us behave. However, the narrative just didn‘t really hang together for me. I found it difficult to keep track of timeframes, and the protagonist didn‘t invite my empathy in spite of her deeply challenging circumstances.

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Hestapleton
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Pickpick

I liked this one! A little unconventional. Stream-of-consciousness, but not in an inaccessible way (looking at you, James Joyce). Instead, it‘s more thoughtful and ruminating as Elyria tries to find her place in the world and within herself. #booked2020 #millennialauthor Book 4/12 for #bfc28 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

swishandflick Love that cover art! 5y
Hestapleton @swishandflick me too! It‘s so captivating! 5y
BarbaraTheBibliophage Awesome! ♥️📚👊🏻 5y
75 likes4 stack adds3 comments
blurb
emilyhaldi
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Elyria secretly runs away from her stable life & husband in NYC with a one-way ticket to New Zealand. She travels perilously through the country as her mind swirls more and more out of control. What I remember most about this read is the dizzying run-on sentences that were frequently (and frustratingly) pages long. If you don‘t enjoy stream-of-consciousness writing, steer clear of this one!!
#fallingslowly
#musicalnewyear

Cinfhen That cover is amazing but the book sounds tedious!!!! 6y
Reviewsbylola Yup hate stream of consciousness. Great cover though! 6y
Kalalalatja Not for me 🙅‍♀️ 6y
See All 14 Comments
jdiehr That would drive me crazy 6y
TrishB @Kalalalatja me neither! 6y
merelybookish Stacked! (Clearly I'm in the minority...) 6y
emilyhaldi @merelybookish well this seems like the perfect opportunity for me to send you this book!! I would love for someone else to give it a try instead of tossing it in my giveaway pile 😄 email me your address and I will send it along 📬 emilydhaldi@gmail.com 6y
BarbaraBB I hardly dare say that I kind of liked it! You‘ll be good, @merelybookish 😀💜 6y
vivastory I love stream of consciousness if I'm in the mood for it 6y
merelybookish @emilyhaldi Thanks Emily! That's so sweet. I will email you later! 😘 @BarbaraBB Glad to hear you liked it! I like stream of consciousness. I'm always intrigued by how people think. 😉 6y
merelybookish @vivastory I'll send it your way when I'm done. 😀 6y
Reggie Oh man, she wrote this book called The Answers, and when I was finished with it I felt like didn‘t have enough answers and the ones I did made me want to punch a wall. It was good, just won‘t be for everyone. And she does the same run on thing there. Which I happen to love. Lol (edited) 6y
Mdargusch Nope. That is not for me. Cool cover though. 6y
CanadianWriter I'm currently reading this book. It's probably the most unique novel I've read in quite some time. 5y
97 likes1 stack add14 comments
review
read.run.travel
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Pickpick

The writing in this book was beautiful. Long sentences, sometimes chaotic but that made them all the more meaningful. I often read a paragraph again to fully understand it and make sure I didn‘t miss anything. The story itself was compelling and well-written. A quick read that didn‘t lack depth ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

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Steph_EE
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Mehso-so
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heylaurenmack
Pickpick

Finally finished this little journey. The constant stream of consciousness occasionally got tiresome but only because I feel like the author did an incredible job of capturing the thoughts of someone suffering from PTSD or major anxiety issues in general. The examinations of human interaction and descriptions of slow decay of our relationships was mesmerizing.

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heylaurenmack

I knew the wildebeest in me was a heavy desire to destroy something and maybe Thomas could also see my tiny, smiling hitman, that smug motherfucker sitting in the center of me. I didn‘t want to lust after anything. I didn‘t want to love anything. I was not a person but just some evidence of myself.

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heylaurenmack

I wanted to be responsible for destroying a small-to-medium sized part of him, and this was a somewhat-sick and somewhat-normal thing, I think, everyone wants to feel like they could destroy a small-to-medium-to-large part of someone who loves them, though not everyone can see that ugly want sleeping under the blankets of love and affection and secure attachment.

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heylaurenmack

The wildebeests that everyone has - there is a part of every human brain that just can‘t bear and be, can‘t sit up straight, can‘t look you in the eye, can‘t sit through time ticking, can‘t keep looking at the same person every day and being looked at by the same person and we all sometimes want to walk away like it never happened.

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heylaurenmack

I think that‘s the thing about fiction, that you live in it totally for a little while but you must forget it, sometimes totally forget it, in order to go about the rest of your life.

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Lindy
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He turned the music up, lit another cigarette, and opened a beer as we drove up a mountain, making hairpin turns at unadvisable speeds. My organs let me know how much they disapproved of where I was sitting—I couldn't remember why I had ever wanted to go anywhere at all.

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Lindy
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I walked into the library and the library smelled like every library I'd ever been in and Dewey decimals were on all the spines, same tiny font, tiny numbers, and I thought, for a moment, that there actually were things you could count on in this world until I realized that the most dependable things in the world are not of any significant use to any substantial problems.

Lindy That's one of my former colleagues in the photo. Edmonton was the first Canadian library to win Library Journal's Library of the Year award. 7y
shawnmooney I'm going to be very curious to hear your review on this one – I've heard such mixed reviews. Hope you enjoy it! 7y
Lindy @shawnmooney I read it a couple of years ago and enjoyed it. My review is here: https://lindypratch.blogspot.ca/2015/03/nobody-is-ever-missing-by-catherine.html... 7y
AlaMich My library is also EPL (Evanston Public Library) so I got a little confused when I saw the tshirt. 😊 7y
Lindy @AlaMich Maybe your EPL will be next! 7y
33 likes5 comments
review
emilyhaldi
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Mehso-so

This book is written as a stream-of-consciousness from the very depressed narrator, Elyria. As you can see on the page shown in photo, some sentences were paragraphs long. Unfortunately, I just never cared much for Elyria and could not relate to her bizarre behavior. But I'm giving points for the beautiful and thoughtful prose.

BarbaraBB I felt exactly the same about that book! 7y
Lindy I enjoyed this very much. I found it mesmerizing, surreal, thoughtful and wry. It isn't comfortable, however, to be viewing life from inside a shattered mind. 7y
Reviewsbylola Stream of consciousness is 👎🏻👎🏻 for me usually. 7y
Mdargusch Sounds too tedious. 7y
85 likes3 stack adds4 comments
blurb
emilyhaldi
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Love when my current read fits the daily prompt perfectly 🤗
#sideprofiles
#jubilantjuly

swishandflick Cool cover! 7y
RealLifeReading Perfect! How is the book? It's on my tbr 7y
kbuggle How is this?? I wanted to read when it first came out, but fell to the side, because, books. But I'm interested in knowing if I should backtrack a bit ;) 7y
Reviewsbylola That's serendipitous! 7y
emilyhaldi @RealLifeReading @kbuggle unfortunately this was not a love for me. But I can see how it might be very enjoyable for others!! I just posted a review 🙃 7y
114 likes5 stack adds5 comments
review
BarbaraBB
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Mehso-so

A young woman leaves all she has behind and flees for New Zealand. Hitchhiking through the country she thinks about her marriage, her family and the 'wildebeest within her'. She hopes to be able to cope by finding solitud.
Lacey writes very well and the way the woman talks about her husband and the reason they married are very touching. You know while reading that the woman is not very stable. Thr story became a bit boring after a while though.

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Mariselam3
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review
mauveandrosysky
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Pickpick

If those cliche feel-good books about women finding themselves (e.g. Eat Pray Love) turn you off, this book is sort of the antithesis. Told in first-person stream-of-consciousness prose, it's a haunting, surreal portrait of a woman who flees to New Zealand in the midst of a personal crisis. Lacey's writing is lyrical and poetic; I found myself dog-earring multiple breathtaking passages and lingering on her stunning, powerful writing.

Josie Sounds amazing! And that cover 😍 8y
EvieBee Can't find a free copy anywhere so thinking I might definitely purchase it. I'm planning a trip to NZ so this seems perfect. 8y
ErickaS_Flyleafunfurled Sounds perfect! 8y
Taylor Nice 8y
41 likes8 stack adds5 comments
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mauveandrosysky
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I'm obsessed with the prose in this book.

EvieBee Sounds compelling! 8y
mauveandrosysky @EvieBee84 it really is! 8y
24 likes2 stack adds2 comments
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mauveandrosysky
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BooksForEmpathy 😍😍😍. 8y
35 likes1 comment
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mauveandrosysky
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Okay, this is definitely more my speed right now.

29 likes1 stack add
review
Taylor
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Pickpick

Enjoyed this, but it's filled with unhealthy, self-destructive trains of thought (that's basically what the book is), so stay away if that type of stuff bothers you.

Marchpane Gorgeous cover illustration 💕 8y
mauveandrosysky Oh this one has been on my list forever. 8y
Taylor @mauveandrosysky I feel like you and I have a little different taste so I'll be interested to see what you think of it. I liked it but didn't love it. 8y
9 likes1 stack add3 comments
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Taylor
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"Standing in front of me was a man with a bald spot, a sign I could trust this man because he, too, knew loss."

This took me by surprise, since it's about the only funny line in this book...possibly unintentionally. ??

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Literature_owl
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Panpan

I wanted to bail so bad on this book, but I forced myself to finish it... and it was horrible. Please don't even waste your time.

blurb
Jokila
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Starting this one today! (Pardon my stupid kiwi joke please 😋)

11 likes1 stack add
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marta.erre
Nessuno scompare davvero | Catherine Lacey

Lui aveva perfezionato l'arte del vedere quel che si vuole vedere, perché è più facile vivere così, vedere il mondo come una serie di cose familiari, un posto dove tutti provano quello che provi tu e vedono quello che vedi tu.

2 likes1 stack add