Salvage
by Jane F. Kotapish
On This Page
Description
The narrator of Salvage - a woman in her early thirties - has left her hectic Manhattan lifestyle for rural Virginia. Escaping a trauma suffered on the New York subway, she is also fighting demons from her childhood. Her mother, Lois, miscarried when she was a child, and the imagined product of this pregnancy - a closet-dwelling pyromaniac with a synesthetic concept of the world named Nancy - haunted her for many years. Her mother is the other problematic relationship in her life. Bizarrely show more unhinged and increasingly eccentric, it seems that she's developing close friendships with various Saints from the Dark Ages. The narrator fears for her sanity, but when the Saints actually start to turn up for dinner and drinks, the reality of her world seems to be under threat. show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Recommendations
391 The storytelling and sequence are similar, especially if you enjoy your literature with a poetic, descriptive bent.
Member Reviews
Salvage is beautifully imagistic and a compelling read. It is thoughtful but entirely visceral, a mad traipse through inner worlds and dusty cupboards that make up memory. I've already lost two copies by loaning them out to friends (who have yet to return them!) Hopefully, I'll have enough spare change soon to buy it again, and this time I'll be sure to get it back.
This is the story of. Um. Actually I have no idea. WHile Kotapish can go on for pages about the earthy smell emanating from her mother's womb as her unborn sister germinates, she seems to not want to waste too many words on an actual plot. After a lot of heavy prose and piecemeal snippets it appears that the protagonist had witnessed some awful subway incident and left her ill described hectic Manhattan life to park herself in Virginia suburbia. She has a crazy mom, Lois, whose flirtation with deluded insanity is all the more confused by the author's confusing prose.
Phantom baby, named Nancy, is the absolutely most disturbing character and seems to only want to destroy things. She speaks in weird poetic fragments and contributes nothing show more to the story.
More often than not this seemed to be about the author and not the plot and the author was so obviously in love with her own writing. For example, she (protagonist) mentions how at age eight she loved her friend's dad because of the beautiful sentences he composed.
Anyway other than being rather beautifully composed, as a long poem, this book stank. show less
Phantom baby, named Nancy, is the absolutely most disturbing character and seems to only want to destroy things. She speaks in weird poetic fragments and contributes nothing show more to the story.
More often than not this seemed to be about the author and not the plot and the author was so obviously in love with her own writing. For example, she (protagonist) mentions how at age eight she loved her friend's dad because of the beautiful sentences he composed.
Anyway other than being rather beautifully composed, as a long poem, this book stank. show less
Disappointing book. I felt cheated at the end. Hard to say who was crazier, the mother who talked to saints or the nutty daughter.
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information
2 Works 33 Members
Awards and Honors
Awards
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 2008
- Dedication
- For Seah
- First words
- I named my dead sister Nancy and talked to her in the privacy of my closet for eleven years.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)And although I wouldn't mind being stranded up here a while, I'm thinking I'd better climb down.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 30
- Popularity
- 924,692
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.29)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 5
























































