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Saving Agnes (2001)

Saving Agnes (2001)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Rating
3.01 of 5 Votes: 2
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ISBN
031227193X (ISBN13: 9780312271930)
Language
English
Publisher
picador

About book Saving Agnes (2001)

Every so often I need to read a Rachel Cusk....a proper wordy workout for the brain, like doing a cryptic crossword. They should all come with a free dictionary because it’s a sure thing that I will be reaching for one before long. I would consider it a wasted read if it didn’t contribute at least three new words to my vocabulary.In this novel we meet Agnes who finds just about everything in her life a mystifying ordeal – work, socialising, finding a boyfriend. At first she seemed hard to sympathise with – wealthy family, gainfully employed, living in a house share with two long standing friends...what’s to complain about? She should just stop over-thinking everything! Yet I found myself nodding time and time again in agreement with the musings of the embattled Agnes. I find myself in sympathy generally with any character who struggles socially, but I would hazard a guess that many people more sociable than me would agree with her on some things. Faced with the scenario with the ex-boyfriend in the restaurant my reaction would have been the same as Agnes’...just toe-curling and yet totally believable. As with all Rachel Cusk’s novels, there were sentences I had to read numerous times to properly get the gist. All those long words jammed together....and yet when the picture emerges it just shimmers with clarity. I admire the way she builds up a paragraph with complex, wordy sentences like an archer gradually drawing back a bow, and then lets fly with a short snappy sentence – right into the centre of the target.I wondered whether the end might let the whole thing down by being cheesy – Agnes sees the light etc etc, and yet it wasn’t like that. I loved the way the end was done, in fact it was one of my favourite parts of the novel.So I’ve got my fix of vocabulary for a while – might be in need to some chick-lit to detox now, mind you.

Do You like book Saving Agnes (2001)?

Some consider "Saving Agnes" depressing - I think it's deep, although it is true that the protagonist, Agnes, IS comfortabely depressed. She is actually so depressed and self-absorbed that she doesn't notice that she is dating a junkie. And she is such a greenhorn, that she believes that every junkie shoots, there is more of Agnes' naivety displayed throughout the story, which is not much of a story, more a wordy spiral into the abyss, somewhere dark and lonely, a place where even the most caring parents cannot give you shelter. Some moments in this novel haunted me afterwards. Like the scene in the tube station, which brutally shows how fast you can drop in someone else's esteem and how cold people are. I also very much enjoyed the chapter where Agnes has her date at the Hampton Court. It's bitter sweet and very painful like every heart-break.Very interesting is the setting - three friends living together in a place that falls apart which I picutered like something in Orson Welles' "The Process".Since English is not my mother-tongue, I am used to look up words, but in Cusak's case you should always have a dictionary at hand. I can understand that some people may find her writing contrived, but I am very grateful for this book.
—Jane Juliette Sue

Amazing. Also very relevant to this period in my life. I had to force myself to read it slower, because I found I was missing a lot. Nothing really happens - it's similar to "Breathing Lessons" by Anne Tyler in that way - but that's the point. But if you easily become bored by books where nothing happens, I'd say don't read it. (I don't think my mom, for example, would like it). Recommended by Curtis Sittenfeld, who is my favorite author, and though I still prefer her, this had an element of mysticism to it that I loved.
—Olivia

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