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The Unfolding
The Unfolding: A Novel | A.M. Homes
2 posts | 3 read | 2 to read
"A dazzling portrait of a family—and a country—in flux…The Unfolding is hilarious and shocking and heartbreaking and just a little bit deranged—in other words, it’s a book that feels like what it feels like to be alive right now." --Nathan Hill, author of The Nix “Gripping, sad, funny, by turns aching and antic and, as always, exceedingly well-observed and -written.”--Michael Chabon, bestselling and Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Moonglow and The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay In her first novel since the Women’s Prize award-winning May We Be Forgiven, A.M. Homes delivers us back to ourselves in this stunning alternative history that is both terrifyingly prescient, deeply tender and devastatingly funny. The Big Guy loves his family, money and country. Undone by the results of the 2008 presidential election, he taps a group of like-minded men to reclaim their version of the American Dream. As they build a scheme to disturb and disrupt, the Big Guy also faces turbulence within his family. His wife, Charlotte, grieves a life not lived, while his 18-year-old daughter, Meghan, begins to realize that her favorite subject—history—is not exactly what her father taught her. In a story that is as much about the dynamics within a family as it is about the desire for those in power to remain in power, Homes presciently unpacks a dangerous rift in American identity, prompting a reconsideration of the definition of truth, freedom and democracy—and exploring the explosive consequences of what happens when the same words mean such different things to people living together under one roof. From the writer who is always “razor sharp and furiously good” (Zadie Smith), a darkly comic political parable braided with a Bildungsroman that takes us inside the heart of a divided country.
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review
Decalino
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Pickpick

This subtly satirical novel opens in 2008 as John McCain loses to Barack Obama, setting off an existential crisis in a man we know only as the Big Guy. Used to being in control, he brings together a group of like-minded men to develop a long term plan to take back the country. Meanwhile, his wife and daughter are taking the first steps toward independence from his gravitational pull. This was a slow burn but by the end I considered it a pick.

review
Libby1
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Pickpick

It‘s 2008, Obama has just been elected for the first time, and the Big Guy is ready to lose his mind. The Big Guy can always buy what he wants, and this changing America is NOT what he wants. Can he create a cabal around him to take the country back?

This satire is devastating, prescient, and often funny. It‘s dialogue-heavy and clunky at times. There were times I loved it and times I wanted to throw it across the room.

An almost perfect book.