Friday, November 23, 2018

THE GOLDEN STATE




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The Golden State, Lydia Kiesling, Farrar Straus and Giroux, 2018, 290 pp
 
 
Let me start by saying that I adored this novel. I have spent more time thinking about how to review it than I did reading it. (It was compulsively easy to read.) During the days I spent thinking about what I wanted to say, I have gone out to lunch, picked up new glasses, had dinner and plenty of drinks at a music event and listened to the hour long interview with Lydia Kiesling on the Otherppl podcast. Meanwhile the library due date for the book has come and gone. Time, as they say, is up.
 
Daphne, the mother of 14-month-old Honey, her first child, has been juggling too much for too long. Her Turkish husband has been kept out of the United States by immigration bureaucratic fuckery for months. She has a full time job and a good daycare for Honey but money is tight, her somewhat cool job involves more bureaucracy, and she is lonely for her husband.

One Friday she has a mild meltdown. On the way to work, she turns around, goes back to their apartment, packs up basic necessities, picks up Honey from daycare and splits. Since this happens in San Francisco, CA, USA, Daphne has a car. She also has an inherited mobile home (the nice kind with a yard on a piece of property) in a small high desert town.

During her ten days there, she spends hour after hour with Honey, pretty much obsessing over her current life situation. Such is the writing skill of Lydia Kiesling that she turns these ten days of the minutia of toddler care, the odd encounters smart, liberal Daphne has with the Trump supporters in town, the obsessive pingponging of her mind, into a gripping narrative.

I have not spent hours at a time with small children for many years; over 40 years ago with my own, almost 20 years ago with my grandchildren. I have apparently not forgotten the strange brew of deep love for them and even deeper boredom as the hours pass. I always felt overcome by the love and guilty about the boredom. I have never felt more understood about all of that than I did while reading The Golden State.

Then, all of a sudden (though surely both Daphne and I should have seen it coming) this young woman involves herself so impetuously in an ill-advised situation that I feared for her and Honey for the last 90 pages. I mean real fear, heart-pounding, foreboding fear.

I got to know Lydia Kiesling's writing through a regular feature on The Millions, one of the first highly successful literary blogs. She wrote brilliant, interesting reviews about many of the 100 Modern Library novels. I was drawn to her voice, her perceptions, her style. In fact, she had the most influence on me as a reviewer out of the countless book reviewers I have read. She is now the editor of The Millions and The Golden State is her first novel. From the first page I recognized that voice.

If you are a mom, not the perfect kind but the kind who wants (or wanted) to be as perfect as possible without losing touch with the rest of your life, I recommend this novel. It is like therapy and the writing is as perfect as we all wanted to be.

If you are Lydia Kiesling and you read this review, I hope I did your novel justice without giving away too much but leaving all the other delights therein for other readers to discover on their own.


(The Golden State is available in hardcover by order from Once Upon A Time Bookstore.)

16 comments:

  1. I've been wanting to read this one and yours is the first review I've seen. Glad you enjoyed it. I think I might enjoy it.

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  2. It sounds like you've found another winner! Good for you.

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    1. I have been a fortunate reader lately!

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  3. This one has been sitting on my 'maybe' shelf for a while but your review makes me want to read it now.

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  4. This one sounds a bit like the movie Tully, I mean, the motherhood bit. You did a nice tribute to the author and her writing. Yet another connection with a published author. How cool! :-)

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    1. Yes on the motherhood bit but from a different angle.

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  5. Oh nice review Judy. One of your best this year perhaps -- and there are so many good ones! I have read others who've blogged about this novel too. I'm putting it on my library list. thanks

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  6. Nice review as usual! I've not heard of this novel before,but will be adding to my ever growing reading wishlist.

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    1. I think it is extra good if you live in California!

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    2. Since I live near San Francisco, this may be an extra fun read!

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  7. This was already on my TBR, Judy but I just starred it and moved it much closer to the top of the list. Thanks for your insight!

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    1. Great! I hope you find it as good as I did.

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  8. Thank you Carole for stopping by!

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