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Ottessa Moshfegh

Autor(a) de My Year of Rest and Relaxation

16+ Works 8,156 Membros 370 Reviews 9 Favorited

About the Author

Ottessa Moshfegh is a fiction writer. She was awarded the Plimpton Prize for her stories in The Paris Review and granted a creative writing fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. She is currently a Wallace Stegner fellow at Stanford. Her title My Year of Rest and Relaxation made the mostrar mais bestseller list in 2018. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos
Image credit: Author Ottessa Moshfegh at the 2015 Texas Book Festival. By Larry D. Moore, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=44461234

Obras de Ottessa Moshfegh

My Year of Rest and Relaxation (2018) 3,040 cópias
Eileen (2015) 2,026 cópias
Homesick for Another World (2017) 1,033 cópias
Death in Her Hands (2020) 892 cópias
Lapvona (2022) 762 cópias
McGlue (2014) 372 cópias
Bettering Myself (2013) 9 cópias
My New Novel (2021) 6 cópias
An Honest Woman 4 cópias
Mr Wu 2 cópias
Slumming {story} 2 cópias
No Place for Good People {story} (2017) 1 exemplar(es)

Associated Works

Dark Tales (2017) — Prefácio, algumas edições521 cópias
The Paris Review: Women Writers at Work (1989) — Prefácio — 143 cópias
Granta 139: Best of Young American Novelists (2017) — Contribuinte — 71 cópias
Granta 144: Generic Love Story (2018) — Contribuinte — 54 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome padrão
Moshfegh, Ottessa
Data de nascimento
1981-05-20
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
USA
Local de nascimento
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Locais de residência
New York, New York, USA
China
Educação
Barnard College
Brown University
Ocupação
novelist
Premiações
Shortlist Booker Prize 2016

Membros

Resenhas

I'm still trying to figure out what to do with these stories—in a good way. It's extremely visceral writing, at times a little too much so, that's also painstaking in its detail. And each narrator is so different from the last. How does she do that so well? Overall just a great reading experience that makes me want to read more.
 
Marcado
gonzocc | outras 44 resenhas | Mar 31, 2024 |
In 1964, 24-year-old Eileen Dunlop lives in a small coastal Massachusetts town with her emotionally abusive, alcoholic father and works a dead-end job as a secretary in the office of a juvenile detention center. Eileen's lackluster life has her imagining all kinds of wild and violent things, stalking a co-worker she finds physically attractive, and generally being an unpleasant person. But she also dreams of running away to New York one day ... and that one day something shocking happens.

This is an odd book, although I think it was good overall. It's not a crime novel per se, although there is a crime at the heart of it and Eileen's work at the prison plays a huge role. It feels like a 1930s hard-boiled detective story, just minus the detective. Instead, that (usually male) character is replaced by Eileen. She has a lot of that sort of stereotypical protagonist's backstory and characteristics, including few real ties in terms of friendship, family, or romantic partners and thus is easily swayed when a femme fatale comes into her life.

In Eileen's case, although she describes it as a "crush," she also makes note to say it's not a romantic feeling for her femme fatale. Rebecca, the new woman at work who has Eileen in awe, is sophisticated and worldly -- or so it seems. Like Eileen, the reader is constantly left wondering about Rebecca and who she is really, where she comes from, and what she cares about deep down.

Moshfegh is certainly talented as a writer and that shows. Words and phrases flow beautifully, even when the content is not necessarily so. (She does have a tendency for the gratuitous, particularly when it comes to bodily functions, so your mileage may vary here.) She knows how to build tension, with Eileen constantly throwing foreshadowing hints here and there as she narrates the story. (Although the main story is set around Christmas 1964, Eileen is narrating from a distance in the present as a much older woman.) Moshfegh also gets the psychology of people, with Eileen being that type of person who desperately wants to be loved but makes herself unlovable as a defense mechanism, more than likely because of the emotional abuse she's suffered. In a lesser writer's hands, having such an unlikeable main character could sink a book, but here it works.

Like many a good noir novel or movie, the book ends in such a way as to leave readers questioning the ethics of justice, and revenge and questioning their morality of what's right and wrong. It is a haunting story that will stay with you as you muddle it over, just as Eileen does in her later years.

The audiobook narrator does a superb job. So much of the story is just in Eileen's head and pure narration like that can often be done in a somewhat dull way, but this narrator speaks so much life into every word, with tons of vim and vigor. The dialogue is more limited, but she does a good job giving everyone a distinct voice.
… (mais)
½
 
Marcado
sweetiegherkin | outras 107 resenhas | Mar 27, 2024 |
i too want to sleep forever and never do anything
this was really unique and comfy but also kinda suffocating

-some parts were a tad too crude for the rest of the book?
-she kinda sucked as a person but it was still super entertaining and i would read this again
 
Marcado
maggiewh | outras 132 resenhas | Mar 19, 2024 |
wow 200 pages about someone sleeping. loved it
 
Marcado
highlandcow | outras 132 resenhas | Mar 13, 2024 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
16
Also by
4
Membros
8,156
Popularidade
#2,967
Avaliação
½ 3.6
Resenhas
370
ISBNs
162
Idiomas
17
Favorito
9

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