What Are You Like?

by Anne Enright

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From a Man Booker Prize-winning author, a "hauntingly eloquent" novel of love, loss, family, and what a woman finds while in search of herself (The Seattle Times).Born in Dublin in 1965, Maria Delahunty was raised by her grieving father after her mother died during childbirth. Two decades later, Maria is living in New York awash in longing and in love with the wrong man. Going through his things, she discovers a photograph of a little girl who looks an awful lot like her--but isn't her. Soon show more Maria begins to unravel a long-buried secret more devastating than her father's mourning, but bursting with possibility..."Glittering... An Irish woman with a plate of steel somewhere between her skin and her heart... must travel back and forth, from childhood memories to the present, ratcheting herself up to adulthood as so many of us do." --Susan Salter Reynolds, Los Angeles Times Book Review"So sad that you want to laugh out loud. [This novel] deals with areas of experience and patterns of living that no one else has noticed." --Colm To?ibi?n, New York Times-bestselling author of Brooklyn"The emotional tautness springing from bare-bones storytelling suggests Raymond Carver. The penetrative exploration of domestic relationships, especial among women, calls to mind... Anne Tyler." --Newsday show less

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7 reviews
An unsettling early novel - this is a rather disjointed story of twin girls separated at birth when their mother dies. The chapters switch between the protagonists in a non-linear way with occasional repetitions, which requires a but of concentration, and as ever some of Enright's descriptions are startling and unsentimental. Probably not the best place to start with Enright but an interesting read.
Lots of interesting writing but it was too much of disconnected plot pieces for me to really enjoy. Going back into the Bookcrossing pile.
From the first page, talking about a newborn baby: "You felt this baby was all skin, holding the soft little parcel of her insides: her fresh little kidneys, the squiggle of her guts, her quail's bones. You could eat her, that's all, her bladder like a sweet little onion and her softly sprouting brain." Nope.
It ended where I wish it had begun: twins separated at birth were reunited. It was a muddle of unclear events and characterization and irritating writing until that point.
Tussen de spullen van haar pasverworven geliefde vindt Maria een foto van een twaalfjarig meisje. Ze herkent zichzelf - dezelfde ogen, dezelfde glimlach - maar ze is het niet: het meisje draagt kleren die Maria nooit heeft bezeten. Al die tijd voelde Maria zich een vreemdeling, een buitenstaander. Nu weet ze waarom. Het meisje op de foto is haar tweelingzusje Rose. Als hun moeder in het kraambed sterft, besluit haar man, Bert, één kind te houden: Maria. Het andere laat hij achter in een klooster. Rose komt terecht in een pleeggezin, waar het een komen en gaan is van probleem kinderen. Maria brengt haar jeugd door in het nieuwe gezin van haar vader, als een overblijfsel uit zijn verleden. De meisjes groeien op zonder dat ze van elkaars show more bestaan weten - de een in Engeland, de ander in Ierland. Als Rose en Maria na twintig jaar toevallig oog in oog komen te staan, schuiven hun parallelle levens ineen tot een dubbelbeeld.

Evenbeeld is het ontroerende en geestige verhaal van mensen op zoek naar het ontbrekende deel in hun leven: een familielid, geborgenheid of liefde. In zeldzaam mooie taal en korte, perfecte zinnen weet Anne Enright haarfijn hun broze bestaan en de hoekigheid van hun gevoelens te vangen. Haar stijl is uiterst verrassend: via omtrekkende bewegingen laat ze ons kennismaken met de hoofdpersonen, alsof we hen door kijkgaatjes mogen bespieden. Evenbeeld is een indringende roman over identiteit en afkomst, over liefde en gemis, isolement en ontwrichting.
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25+ Works 8,692 Members
Anne Teresa Enright (born 11 October 1962) is an Irish author. She received an English and philosophy degree from Trinity College, Dublin. Enright is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature; her novel The Gathering won the 2007 Man Booker Prize. She has also won the 1991 Rooney Prize for Irish Literature, the 2001 Encore Award and the 2008 show more Irish Novel of the Year. Enright's writings have appeared in several magazines, including The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Granta, the London Review of Books, The Dublin Review and the Irish Times. In 2015 she made the New Zealand Best Seller List with her title The Green Road. This title also made the Costa Book Award 2015 shortlist in the UK. It also won the Irish Book Award for Novel of the Year. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
What Are You Like?
Original publication date
2000
Important places
Dublin, Ireland; New York, New York, USA
Dedication
for my parents
First words
Dublin, 1965

She was small for a monster, with the slightly hurt look that monsters have and babies share, the same need to understand. The gravity of that look, pulling everything into her, was enough to make you hum... (show all) and walk around the room. She saw everything, ate it with her eyes, she made women's breasts ache and men rattle their keys. -Chapter 1, Crossing the Line
Original language
English
Canonical DDC/MDS
823.92
Canonical LCC
PR6055.N73

Classifications

Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
823.92Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-2000-
LCC
PR6055 .N73Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000
BISAC

Statistics

Members
206
Popularity
158,121
Reviews
5
Rating
½ (3.34)
Languages
Dutch, English, French, Spanish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
9
ASINs
7