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You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine (2015)

par Alexandra Kleeman

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3861365,784 (3.49)1
"A missing-person mystery told from the point of view of the missing person; an American horror story that concerns sex and friendship, consumption and appetite, faith and transformation, real food and reality television; and ... a wholly singular view of modern womanhood"--Dust jacket flap.
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Affichage de 1-5 de 13 (suivant | tout afficher)
2022 book #16. 2015. A young woman begins having trouble separating her identity from that of her roommate and her boyfriend. Then she fall in with a cult whose purpose is to sever you from your identity. She maybe gets away at the end. Very strange book but oddly compelling. ( )
  capewood | Mar 17, 2022 |
the first 2/3's of this book (it's devided into three parts) were amazing. They're basically just the protagonist describing her mundane life in extremely grotesque terms... People called this fight club for girls but it's more like kafka for girls. It's a really good way to describe the sort of existential horror of existing as a woman in society, and on top of that it's some of the best prose I've ever read. However in part 3 the story goes from mundanities to the protag becoming basically a scientologist and I lost interest. The author tried to tie together every loose end which I felt cheapened the entire novel because the interesting part of the beginning was how pointless and random some of these things were, like the psychotic commercials or the eating hair part. The cult stuff was just not believable or interesting to me, because the fun of the first half of the book is describing everyday life as if it's a horror movie, because it makes you confront things you normally take for granted cuz you're looking at them thru the lens of an outsider. but once you introduce actual genre elements what's the point? I also wish the alienation part of the book dealt with internet stuff. Maybe it's gotten worse since 2015 but I feel like the internet is a bigger factor in my life than TV. ( )
  jooniper | Sep 10, 2021 |
Read the whole book just to find out about the Virgin Mary giving birth like a shark that reproduces without a mate. ( )
  Raechill | May 4, 2021 |
You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine is a catalog of the mundane made nightmarish and surreal. Eating an orange is a visceral act of destruction and consumption. Applying makeup is an absolute negation of the self.

Sex is dissociative and alien, a study of individual body parts joining and separating in feverish dispassion. Commercials are bizarre tragedies populated with gruesome cartoon imagery.

Your favorite game show ruins lives and breaks up marriages. The neighbors dressed themselves in bed sheets with holes for their eyes and checked out of society to join a new cult. Your roommate wants to become you so thoroughly that you might no longer exist.

You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine is a bit difficult to summarize in any kind of concise fashion, but the back copy certainly tries. The main thing you need to know before reading it is that it isn’t particularly plot-driven and the characters aren’t much more than archetypes.

The first three-fourths are an episodic, anxious meditation on body image, consumerism and food issues. The last quarter changes gears a bit when the main character decides she has found a solution to her general malaise, and the book loses a bit of its odd, surrealist charm. That last quarter also suffers from a sudden influx of jargon, but the end still mostly sticks the landing.

My favorite parts were Kleeman’s descriptions of terrifying commercials for a chemical-filled brand of snack cakes. Imagine an existentialist Wile E Coyote who doesn’t just fall but breaks at a spiritual level thanks to the machinations of sentient dessert, and you’ve got the general idea.

I also appreciated the author’s horrifying descriptions of food and eating even as they made me cringe. Eating is basically never pleasurable in this book; instead, it’s an act of violence against both food and eater.

I’m honestly not entirely sure why I enjoyed this book as much as I did. I’m not usually patient enough to read weird, arty books, and it was definitely a bit pretentious and overwritten. It’s possible that listening to the audiobook was a big part of why I liked it; in fact, I’m pretty sure I would have gotten bogged down trying to read it in print.

Accordingly, I’d rate this one as a qualified recommendation. If a rambling, slim story about body image and food issues sounds like it might be worth your time, you’ll probably get a few laughs and/or shudders out of Kleeman’s début. ( )
  unsquare | Feb 16, 2021 |
Fun to read, with some really well done fictional Jim woodring-y candy bar commercials and near-future nightmare consumer stuff. A few images from this really stuck with me (lipstick covered hands, swallowing logs of matted human hair, grocery store employee uniform/masks, etc.) ( )
  Jetztzeit | May 15, 2020 |
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"A missing-person mystery told from the point of view of the missing person; an American horror story that concerns sex and friendship, consumption and appetite, faith and transformation, real food and reality television; and ... a wholly singular view of modern womanhood"--Dust jacket flap.

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