Weather

English language

Published Jan. 1, 2020

ISBN:
978-0-385-35110-2
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4 stars (2 reviews)

Weather is a 2020 novel by American writer Jenny Offill. The novel is narrated by a college librarian, Lizzie. The book takes place before and after Donald Trump becomes president of the United States and depicts Lizzie's family life and her concerns about climate change. The novel received mostly positive reviews, with favorable comparisons to Offill's previous novel, Dept. of Speculation and praise for its structure.

2 editions

Devastating

4 stars

This might be one of the most depressing and devastating books I’ve read on a long time. It’s so quiet and yet so affecting. The unnamed narrator navigates the mess of her personal and family life amid her growing awareness of climate disaster. She drops her kid off at school, tries to help her substance-addicted brother, and wonders how her marriage is holding up, all while ruminating about prepping and survival strategies and whether to move somewhere “safer” in anticipation of a dismal future. It’s depressing because of its familiarity, devastating because it’s like looking in a mirror during your late night bouts of doom and gloom.

The writing is great and the semi-stream-of-consciousness is very effective. This book would be good for those who aren’t already mired in the sort of rumination this narrator is. Lots of people need to read this book. Unfortunately I think I wasn’t one …

Review of 'Weather' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Freddie DeBoer couldn't recommend this more highly, so on the list it went! And I almost finished it in one go (it's short and the vignettes alternating between poetic and satire) but after leaving the book aside for 4 days, I just couldn't recapture what I was entranced by in the first place. the novel is heavily influenced by the Trump presidency and climate change and the author does a good job of slowly descending the narrator into bleak Armageddon. But I don't live living there, or planning for there, so ultimately it didn't resonate with me.

in many ways it reminded me of No One is Talking About This - very current and also mesmerising in the first go. maybe some books are just meant to be consumed like a film: in one go