If "Click" by Rebecca Cook were not so remarkably well
written I do not believe anyone would be able to summon up
the courage to finish this book. As it is, you probably
won't put it down until you read the last lines and just sit
there, thinking.
It is the story of a young woman who
turns—just for a moment, one moment—to look at her arguing
children in the back seat of her car and drives straight
into a Mack truck, killing children and husband, mangling
her own body and soul almost beyond recovery.
"We are getting into the car, the boys fighting over a toy
truck neither of them really wants. We snap them into their
car seats. I can feel the red ribs of the steering wheel,
slick in my hands; I am turning left on Northbrook, right on
Willow. I am driving straight into forever."
When the book opens, three years have gone by "on a held
breath." Ronnie has been hospitalized for months with
catatonia—unable to speak, move—"and then, one day, after a
moment, after just a split second really, she 'came to.'
She opened herself, stretched out her hands, and poured
herself a pink cup of water, the very best drink of water
she'd ever had, she who was so thirsty from flying straight
through the night and into the morning of herself…"
Twenty-eight years old, back to college, beginning a new
life, buoyed by—or drowning in—hallucinations.
Ronnie's life is told in the first person as it moves
between present and past tense with no respect for linear
time. As a result, everything is happening now, or again,
or in the future. How is she able to hang on to at least a
shred of sanity? She is fixated on even numbers. (Ronnie
is, not incidentally, a twin.) Everything is done in pairs.
Inhale. Exhale. Count your steps. Avoid cracks. She
finds some release in sex, actually lots of sex. But the
hallucinations are never really out of sight. Inhale.
Exhale. Count the ice cubes in the water glass: 2,4,6…
Everything in pairs.
"Click" does not have an awkward sentence, phrase, word. It
reads with the grace that only a very skilled writer can
summon. Not surprisingly, Rebecca Cook is a well-regarded
poet.
Can be bought from Amazon.
source:Bookreview.com |
3 comments:
This book sounds interesting.
i'm not a book freak
@romeo,try begin to read books.One of the major issues we have on this side of the world.
Post a Comment