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Review: No Book But the World

Locating the function within dysfunction

March 26, 2014 17:38
Leah Hager Cohen

By

David Herman,

David Herman

1 min read

By Leah Hager Cohen
Clerkenwell Press, £12.99

Leah Hager Cohen's last novel, The Grief of Others (2011) was a clear and moving account of the members of a dysfunctional family in suburban upstate New York trying to pull their lives together. The son, Paul, is an "overweight, acned, awkward" teenager, bullied and lonely at school. The daughter, Biscuit, is secretive and plays truant.

It received considerable acclaim and made the longlist for the 2012 Orange Prize. Its critics (including me) thought it too melodramatic and sentimental.

Her new novel, No Book But The World, bears an uncanny resemblance to The Grief of Others. It is also about a dysfunctional family in upstate New York. Again, the focus is on the children. The son, Fred, is large, not normal, unable to deal with school. The daughter, Ava, can't shake off the stranger aspects of her childhood.