Showing posts with label sexual harassment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sexual harassment. Show all posts

Saturday, August 19, 2023

I Have Some Questions For You

I Have Some Questions For You by Rebecca Makkai (2023) 435 pages

Bodie Kane is a film professor and podcaster who goes back to the boarding school where she attended high school to teach a couple of two-week long mini courses. Being on campus pulls her 25 years back into the past: she had roomed one semester with Thalia Keith, who was murdered during their senior year. Omar, a Black coach who ran the athletic programs had been found guilty of the murder and had been in prison for a couple of decades now. Bodie is now re-hashing her time at high school, including many instances of sexual harassment by male students towards female students, and of possible grooming of Thalia, by one teacher in particular, and she now thinks Omar is innocent.

She gives her podcasting class an assignment to investigate and report on a number of possible topics, including the murder of Thalia, and two students are looking into it. Most adults on campus, in addition to Bodie's former classmates, are displeased when word gets outs that Bodie is encouraging the re-examination of the murder. 

Numerous instances where women have been killed by their partners are interspersed throughout, which help inform Bodie's reconsideration of Thalia's murder. The modern MeToo movement and racism both loom large. Bodie is obsessed and goes through her own list of suspects one by one, trying to look for reasons and opportunity for each person to have murdered Thalia. In a sleep-deprived moment, she even adds herself to the list.

Bodie's character, and the other characters she describes in the course of the story, seem so well fleshed out in this riveting novel.



Saturday, July 29, 2023

Nothing But the Truth

Nothing But the Truth by Holy James (2022) 294 pages

We meet Lucy Green just before her thirtieth birthday. She's hoping to land a new client for her publicity agency, while vying for a promotion, and also hoping her boyfriend of two years will propose. Instead, her boyfriend stands her up at a bar the evening before her birthday, which leads to Lucy talking to Adam, the bartender. He fixes her a special birthday drink before she leaves. The next morning, she finds that she cannot tell a lie, which leads to panic. Her job depends on her massaging the truth in order to work with her bosses and to save the careers of her clients. Not to mention getting along with her mother.

Was the drink magical? Maybe?? Most of the book flies past in the course of this one day – her birthday – and shows what happens when Lucy tells only the truth. This includes allowing her body to show its own truths by not subjecting herself to uncomfortable clothes and too much makeup in order to fit some ideal of how a person in her position should look (despite the social discomfort it causes).

I had to bat away my disbelief a few times, but once I decided to accept a bit of magic, I found the story to be a fast, fun trip.




Thursday, November 21, 2019

This Is Pleasure

This Is Pleasure: a Story / Mary Gaitskill, 83 p.

Margot and Quin are long-time friends.  When Quin's career is destroyed by accusations of sexual harassment, his story unfolds in alternating accounts from the two of them.  A near pitch-perfect exploration of our brave new #metoo world, excusing no one but illuminating everything.  I loved it.