I have found my favorite book of the year, my friends. I always find it in January and then spend the rest of the year moping that nothing measures up.
Emma Cline’s novel The Guest is a bloody masterpiece. I read it in one day, a pretty busy day with no time to read but I made time for this “hit you in the face and leave you hemorrhaging on the sidewalk” kind of book.
You, folks, know what type of stuff gets to me. Gritty realism, the cleanest possible writing. By that I obviously don’t mean lack of swear words. I mean the kind of writing that Strunk and White will read for eternity after they die and go to heaven.
“Arkady, I beg you, don’t speak beautifully,” says a character of Turgenyev’s Sons and Fathers to his verbally incontinent friend. That’s what I often want to say to writers. Stop trying to show how clever you are. Stop trying to be cute or teach me a lesson. Tell me a story, that’s all I want.
In The Guest, Cline tells a story that grips you and cracks you like a walnut. The main character is an unsuccessful, washed-out 22-year-old prostitute Alex. Reviewers complain that Alex is tawdry, unattractive and self-defeating. As if a 22-year-old prostitute could be anything else. Alex is one of those people who are so chaotic in their minds that they warp reality around them. I don’t mean “crazy” or “mentally ill.” Alex is a healthy young woman. But she tarnishes everything she touches because that’s who she is.
I wonder if everybody knows, at least at some level, what it feels to have a disordered mind that turns everything around you to chaos. Or do most people honestly not know what makes the dregs of society what they are?
Cline does know. Her understanding of the people who are inexorably drawn to the bottom is superb. She’s been criticized for not depicting Alex as a victim of “systemic injustices”. But Cline creates literature, not didactic woke tracts. Alex is neither a pure, unfairly persecuted victim nor a terrible villain. She evokes compassion but also a desire to pity her from very far away.
There’s not a trace of wokeness in this book even though Cline is a Californian Millennial with an MFA. She drives a stake through the heart of the rich elites and shows what the world with only the very wealthy and the absolute rejects looks like. Cline writes like it’s 1991 and nobody heard of woke precepts outside of a few campuses. This is yet another thing that makes the novel so narcotic. Reading The Guest is like taking a vacation to a planet where wokeness doesn’t exist. It’s so unusual to read a book where an author talks honestly about how things are that one feels kind of overwhelmed.
OK, if I haven’t persuaded you to give the novel a try, nothing will. But I’m telling you. It’s extraordinary.