Minggu, 17 Mei 2020

[PDF] Download Creatures: A Novel by Crissy Van Meter | Free EBOOK PDF English

Book Details

Title: Creatures: A Novel
Author: Crissy Van Meter
Number of pages:
Publisher: Algonquin Books (January 7, 2020)
Language: English
ISBN: 1616208597
Rating: 3,9     24 reviews

Book Description

Review A Most-Anticipated Book of January 2020 ―Bustle A January 2020 Must-Read ―Entertainment Weekly “Vivid and moving . . . The tempo of [Van Meter’s] sentences matches Winter Island’s foggy skies and roiling seas: at once bright and languid, visceral and lyric . . .Van Meter’s debut is an unwavering triumph . . . A coming-of-age that’s as human as it is wild.” —The New York Times Book Review “A beautiful look at how we navigate the pain and heartbreak that comes with being human.” NPR “An alluring, atmospheric debut.”People “Creatures evokes a family’s fragile bond as deep as the sea . . . The sensibility of this short, gemlike novel puts Van Meter . . . in league with contemporary novelists for whom humans and their environment are tightly bound together—Lydia Millet, Joy Williams and T.C. Boyle come to mind. And Creatures is studded with lovely, melancholy sentences that shimmer like dark sea glass . . . Van Meter tells that story with empathy and clarity but also evokes the wildness that her setting deserves. Creatures delivers a powerful feeling that we, like Evie, are destined to always feel at least a little adrift.” —The Los Angeles Times  “In fluid and nutrient-rich prose, Van Meter creates a sense of island life that will have even the most dedicated landlubbers tasting salt on their lips.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune “Some of the most heartbreaking moments in this novel are the most simply told, and there are scenes of beauty and magic and dry humor amid the chaos . . . A quietly captivating debut.Kirkus Reviews, starred review “Crissy Van Meter balances fracture and fusion and navigates Evangeline’s story with exquisite, racking grace . . . Filled with the ‘pressure of missing things, the leaving of things,’ and ‘the constant foreboding of implosion,’ Crissy Van Meter’s bold debut novel is stamped with a signature, polymetric tension all its own.”Foreword Reviews, starred review “Crissy Van Meter’s Creatures is a lyrical, literary debut that you’ll want on your TBR when it comes to stores next winter.” —Bustle “Van Meter’s wonderfully un-ordinary debut is rather like the ocean itself: layered, deep, and happening all at once . . . This is a moving, graceful novel of how people change and are changed by natures within and without.” —Booklist “Tender and atmospheric . . . Van Meter expertly and effortlessly brings to life at once her father’s substance abuse and dependence, his doting love for his daughter and loyalty to her absent mother, and his inability to be what Evie needs. His deep mark on Evie’s life, and her feelings toward him, are the book’s beating heart . . . this promising debut sneaks up on the reader, packing a devastating emotional punch.” —Publishers Weekly “Creatures is the kind of beautiful book that makes you want to lick the salt from its pages. It’s so physically present you can feel the waves hit your body, smell the sea life, hear the roar of the ocean as your hair whips around your face in the breeze. Crissy Van Meter has written a book about the complexities of love and families, yes, but it’s also a careful look at intimacy through the lens of a person learning and relearning how to love the people who continually let us down. It’s inventive and surprising. The text is tactile; a punch to the heart. It’s one of the best novels I’ve read this year.”—Kristen Arnett, New York Times bestselling author of Mostly Dead Things   “Crissy Van Meter pulls us into depths of loneliness, sweetness, pain, history, and pulsing vulnerability in prose swift and clear as an ocean current, in Creatures. On Winter Island, time and landscape ache with memory; need spills over in subtle moments of intense connection, fracture, deprivation, and wound; unconditional love may be a concept as unreachable as the mainland, and as isolating. Like water, loss and longing fill the space between each prism of a word in this gorgeous, jewel-tone debut.” —Sarah Gerard, author of Sunshine State “At the intersection of the natural world and the human heart, Van Meter explores alcoholism, absence, daughterly loyalties and longing in this slim and beautiful tale that contains a whole aqueous universe in its depths.” —Melissa Broder, author of The Pisces   “Wiry, rhythmic, and wrenchingly beautiful, Creatures plumbs the sea-struck heart of a family fractured by longing and grief.” —Leni Zumas, bestselling author of Red Clocks  “Creatures is a love story like none other—a synesthetic whale song that submerges you deep inside the exhilaration and exhaustion of love. Father love. Mother love. And most of all, the love of place.” —Mesha Maren, author of Sugar Run “Crissy Van Meter has written a tale of hard-won family forgiveness that doubles, somehow, as a sly parable about climate change, about the eggshell fragility of the island-home we take for granted. Brava.”—Jonathan Dee, author of The Locals Read more About the Author Crissy Van Meter grew up in Southern California. Her writing has appeared in Vice, Bustle, Guernica, and Catapult. She holds an MFA in creative writing from the New School. She lives in Los Angeles.
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Customers Review:

This book is beautiful, creative, reflective on life and our humanity. It goes back and forth from past, present, future which was allows the reader the opportunity for critical introspection. The author weaves in facts about the ocean and whales that promote a ponderence on our relation and likeness to animals who inhabited this earth long before us. The extreme familial relationships the main character has and the behavioral outcomes they produce on her marriage are relatable and remind us how much we are shaped by the nurture or lack thereof we receive. This book ends as beautifully poetic as it begins.
Chrissy Van Meter may think she can’t write poetry, but this book begs to differ. “Creatures” is a poem of love and grief in novel form.
I only read this for my book group. I found myself falling for this story, these characters. What a gift.
My son love it! He actually ordered it!
There are some beautiful passages in Creatures, but the way the book is written was more irritating than interesting. The author jumps around in time, in a kind of stream of consciousness jumble of memories and emotions. Not just chapter by chapter but constantly, every paragraph, throughout the whole book. There seemed to be a real time story at the beginning, Evangeline is trying to get ready for her wedding, annoyed by her mother showing up unannounced and distracted that her fiance is out at sea and a storm is coming. The planned beach wedding is also put in jeopardy by a dead and very smelly beached whale. The first “creature.” Different. Intrigued, I plowed on through pages and pages of introspection and memories. It was confusing because although scenes from Evangeline’s childhood, back to about age 3, are dropped into the book in no particular order, many of the “memories” are of a time many years after the wedding.Evangeline is a researcher and there are brief notes about whales and other marine life interspersed throughout. I’m sure they are meant to be profound and literary, but I found them to be useless clutter that I learned to skip over. I seldom give a three star review. Usually, if I don’t like a book, I just quit reading and don’t review at all. But this one kept me hanging one, hoping for something I never found.
Evangeline grows up on a small island off the shore of Southern California. It is home to a myriad of sea creatures which she loves to learn about and lots of wild areas. It sounds like an idyllic environment but her life is far from ideal. Her mother left early, popping in from time to time as she meanders from dream life to dream life, getting Evangeline’s hopes up that this time she’ll stay but she always leaves again crushing the hope. Her father is the island weed dealer; getting by on charm and what he makes selling his customized brand of marijuana and the odd jobs he gets on boats. They live in a series of apartments or houses, sitting for absent owners, taking shelter in lieu of pay, sometimes camping out for months. It is a very unstable life.As she grows up, what Evangeline learns best is that everyone betrays you, everyone leaves. She meets a rich girl whose parents travel a lot and she becomes her best friend. But later on, they drift apart and she is another in the long list of betrayals. Evangeline meets and marries Liam but he is gone for long charters as a fisherman and soon there are other woman, another betrayal and perhaps another person who will leave her behind.The story moves back and forth in time, slowly showing each layer that makes up Evangeline’s life and what shapes her. The writing is poetic and dreamy, describing horrific events in a way that makes them almost seem normal. The reader can’t help but hope that Evangeline will find a way to capture love as an adult despite her rough start in life. This is a debut novel and the reader will finish knowing that it is a book they won’t soon forget and eagerly awaiting Van Meter’s next novel. This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.
Just days before Evie’s wedding, the reader is told there is a dead whale trapped at the entry to Winter Island’s bay, her soon-to-be husband may be lost at sea or may have just not come home, and her neglectful and narcissistic mother arrives unannounced sending Evie back to her childhood. All this happens in the first few pages of the novel. From that inauspicious beginning, the novel never recovers.This is an overly angsty novel told in the first-person stream-of-consciousness voice of Evie. The plot jumps from one period of time to another without any segue and, of course, the reader is taken out of the book while she tries to figure out what’s going on. This happens so often the reader may end up ignoring the time jump and just keep reading hoping she’ll figure out what’s going on if she reads enough. The reader may not be able to articulate what the was book about and after only a few days may not even remember the book at all.There is little or no character development. The author didn’t seem to try to give Evie a personality so she remains amorphous. The other characters, including the mother, remain stereotypically card boardish and uninteresting.My thanks to Algonquin Books and Edelweiss for an eARC.
Right up front understand that there is no straight line in this novel nor is there a particularly strong sense of character in Evie. So if it’s not plot driven and not characters driven, what is it? It’s lovely writing about love, loss, terrible parents, inadequacy, alcoholism, and any number of other things. I suspect it may be one many readers will put down because frankly at times it’s hard to figure out where you are in the story (or what story you’re reading) but stuck with it because while it’s hard to describe, it’s got so many good elements that it’s worth the energy. Thanks to Edelweiss for the ARC. Fans of Booker Prize novels should try this one.