Reader Score
78%
78% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 6 reviews on
In the endless days of the pandemic, a woman spends her time sorting fact from fiction in the life and work of Herman Melville. As she delves into Melville's impulsive purchase of a Massachusetts farmhouse, his fevered revision of Moby-Dick there, his intense friendship with neighbor Nathaniel Hawthorne, and his troubled and troubling marriage to Elizabeth Shaw, she becomes increasingly obsessed by what his devotion to his art reveals about cost, worth, and debt. Her preoccupation both deepens and expands, and her days' work extends outward to an orbiting cast of Melvillean questers and fanatics, as well as to biographers and writers--among them Elizabeth Hardwick and Robert Lowell--whose lives resonate with Melville's. As she pulls these distant figures close, her quarantine quest ultimately becomes a midlife reckoning with her own marriage and ambition.
Absorbing, charming, and intimate, Dayswork considers the blurry lines between life and literature, the slippage between what happens and what gets recorded, and the ways we locate ourselves in the lives of others. In wry, epigrammatic prose, Chris Bachelder and Jennifer Habel have crafted an exquisite and daring novel.
Stephanie Danler is an author.
The joy of reading this book. Ostensibly about a woman’s pandemic obsession with Melville, it is also about Elizabeth Hardwick, the work of biography, the human cost of a piece of art, and mostly, marriage.
Matt Bell is an author.
DAYSWORK by Chris Bachelder and Jennifer Habel. Simultaneously a smart, moving novel about literary obsession—in this case, Melville, and by extension, Hawthorne—and about marriage in the early days of the pandemic. Highly recommended.
VP & Senior Editor at W.W. Norton, co-editor of STATE BY STATE and THE THINKING FAN'S GUIDE TO THE WORLD CUP, attacking midfielder, card-carrying Midwesterner
Coming in Sept, DAYSWORK—a one-of-a-kind novel from Chris Bachelder & Jennifer Habel. Galleys available now... “A wonder.”—Katie Kitamura “A love letter to literature.”—Alexander Chee “Wry, intimate, and wholly original.”—Jess Walter “Extraordinary.”—Sarah Shun-Lien Bynum https://t.co/r7q4mGGuAz