Eileen

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By Ottessa Moshfegh
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13 reviews
NOW A MAJOR FILM
SHORTLISTED FOR THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE
It is winter-time and Eileen Dunlop is dreaming of escaping her life…
In the meantime, her time is spent caring for her alcoholic father, working as a secretary in a prison and shoplifting.
When the beautiful, charismatic Rebecca Saint John arrives on the scene as the new counsellor at the prison, Eileen is enchanted, unable to resist what appears to be a miraculously budding friendship.
But soon, Eileen’s affection for Rebecca pulls her into a crime that far surpasses even her own wild imagination.
FROM THE AUTHOR OF TIKTOK SENSATION MY YEAR OF REST AND RELAXATION
‘Fully lives up to the hype. A taut psychological thriller, rippled with comedy as black as a raven’s wing, Eileen is effortlessly stylish and compelling’ The Times
SHORTLISTED FOR THE CWA NEW BLOOD DAGGER AWARD
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Eileen is an unsettling, uncomfortable and slightly disgusting read; it's a slightly grotesque story with a slightly grotesque protagonist and narrator, and I was mostly glad when I'd finished reading it. It's quite a dark story but it doesn't get quite as dark as I thought it would and there was even something a bit unbelievable and therefore disappointing about the denouement. I got the feeling that the author was taking some kind of pleasure in trying to disgust the reader which somehow made it not quite work, but yet it did.
If the writers intent was to shock the reader, then initially she succeeded. The begining was promising, dark and gripping, with good descriptive writing of Eileen's sordid lifestyle. We hear of her upbringing in what at best could be described as a dysfunctional family, at worst, an abusive family. Although a complex, tormented character, the unlikable Eileen's continued depravity and self loathing became tedious and boring. The charismatic Rebecca initially enchants and engrosses the hapless Eileen, but she fails as a convincing character and her part in the so-called climax of the novel seems rushed, ill...
Read more...Eileen is a strange, unsettling and sometimes repulsive character who we see living, fifty years ago, in a small, cold New England town. She uses a bucket as a toilet, wears her dead mother's clothes, and keeps the decomposing corpse of a small animal in the glove compartment of her car. She alternately arouses our sympathy, and our dislike; we feel sorry for her, but at the same time find it hard not to turn away from her with a shudder. It feels as if the author is pushing us to our limits with this book, but just when...
Read more...Eileen – the book is quite dark and introduces us to the main character Eileen and her longing to escape from her home town X-ville and from her miserable, unhappy, bleak existence (living with her alcoholic father and caring for him) and her secretarial job at the local boys’ prison. While she makes many references to her desire to move to a big city and escape, it appears that Eileen is trapped in many different ways by circumstance and her own nature. Many hints are given that things are about to change for Eileen and the book is a study...
Read more...Sometimes we grow as readers and people by spending time in situations which challenge and disturb us. Other times we are just repulsed. 'Eileen' showers us with characters, settings and themes designed to revolt and repel, a spectrum of crimes, an assortment of abuse, the sights and smells of various body cavities. Highly evocative writing intensifies the foul effect. However after a few chapters I grew bored of these attempts to shock as the plot was not as highly developed as the description. Perhaps by stopping reading at this point I missed the best bits...
Read more...The story of 24 year old Eileen in the 1960s and the culmination of events that forces her to leave the little town near Boston she referred to as Xville, is told by her older 60 something self. The book is about Eileen and just one week in her depraved life. The older Eileen gives a deep and disturbing account of how and who she was. She lived in a disgusting house which was never cleaned with a father who was always drunk, with one hand holding a gin bottle and the other a gun. He was an...
Read more...Oh Eileen, what can I say! This curious creature had me gripped from the outset, in an “I can’t stop gawping at this horrific car crash” kind of way. The sordid story of this awkward, obsessive and disturbed young woman is brought to us from the more grounded standpoint of her 70 something self. A large proportion of the book is taken up in setting the scene, detailing the backdrop that is her miserable life. Her uncaring mother has died, her drunken father has subjected her to a lifetime of verbal abuse, and she is stuck working in a...
Read more...Read as part of Gloucester book club's shadowing of the Man Booker prize 2016. I felt like a human pendulum when I was reading this one! Swinging from like to dislike and back to like again by the end. Gosh it's dark and ugly in places, and occasionally funny too. Eileen's bleak outlook on life is brightened by the arrival of the beautiful Rebecca who takes an interest in her. Eileen quickly becomes besotted with Rebecca who she fantasises will transform her suppressed life. Of course, things don't quite work out that way! At times I...
Read more...Chamwells Chums Book Club Gloucester
Eileen’s world is not a nice place. Reflecting on the week in her life, as a young woman 50 years past, before her escape from X-ville to New York and adulthood, Eileen introduces us to the demeaning drudgery of caring for her alcoholic ex-policeman father and the banality of her job working as a secretary at Moorehead, a prison for adolescent boys. And, sadly, reading about it is, itself, just as boring and tedious. Pages and pages pass without anything really interesting happening. OK, we learn of her romantic obsession with Randy, a guard at Moorehead, her fantasies...
Read more...A brilliant read, it makes the mundane fascinating and is totally addictive. It's not a book to read whilst eating, immersing the reader as it does in quite a sordid world but it's worth missing a meal for! The title character, Eileen, is self-centred and self-obsessed, though even she has her saving graces, but as the reasons why she is the way she is are revealed, one can't help but feel some sympathy for her plight. The other characters and their stories, all seen through Eileen's eyes, are also riveting. The build-up to the final act keeps the...
Read more...An engrossing read, bringing to mind Philip Larkin : They f*** you up, your Mum and Dad. Underparented bulimic Eileen dreams of escape and much of the tension in the book comes from the reader's desire for Eileen to break free from her alcoholic father who saps any self esteem she might have. The possibility of getting away seems to present itself in the form of Rebecca, whom Eileen wants to emulate, but who turns out to have feet of clay and behaves worse than Eileen. The heart rending story of Lee is a revealed at the end, and...
Read more...This novel, set in the frigid New England winter, draws the reader into an uncomfortable, unsettling, dark and ugly world that some have the misfortune to live in. It is a study of a pitiable, despicable, self absorbed, repressed young woman who has arrived in this position largely due to her dysfunctional family. It is a gripping and intriguing read that is richly detailed but in a repugnant way. It highlights the most unpleasant and salacious side of individuals making one address the most repellent side of human nature, which most would much rather ignore and dismiss. The reason I...
Read more...Such an interesting novel with a great lead character. Eileen is gross and cynical and doubting and brilliant in equal measure. A slow-burn without ever getting boring, you'll be caught up in her world enjoy the experience.