Reader Score
61%
61% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 15 reviews on
Long-listed for the 2016 International Dylan Thomas Prize
After two acclaimed story collections, Laura van den Berg brings us Find Me, her highly anticipated debut novel--a gripping, imaginative, darkly funny tale of a young woman struggling to find her place in the world.
Joy has no one. She spends her days working the graveyard shift at a grocery store outside Boston and nursing an addiction to cough syrup, an attempt to suppress her troubled past. But when a sickness that begins with memory loss and ends with death sweeps the country, Joy, for the first time in her life, seems to have an advantage: she is immune. When Joy's immunity gains her admittance to a hospital in rural Kansas, she sees a chance to escape her bleak existence. There she submits to peculiar treatments and follows seemingly arbitrary rules, forming cautious bonds with other patients--including her roommate, whom she turns to in the night for comfort, and twin boys who are digging a secret tunnel.
As winter descends, the hospital's fragile order breaks down and Joy breaks free, embarking on a journey from Kansas to Florida, where she believes she can find her birth mother, the woman who abandoned her as a child. On the road in a devastated America, she encounters mysterious companions, cities turned strange, and one very eerie house. As Joy closes in on Florida, she must confront her own damaged memory and the secrets she has been keeping from herself.
Alexander Chee is a writer.
A great interview by @vincentscarpa with @Lvandenberg on the writing of her first novel, FIND ME, over @Tin_House: http://www.tinhouse.com/blog/38439/a-novel-wants-your-life-an-interview-with-laura-van-den-berg.html
Future corpse. Until then, perpetual worry. Managing editor at Bleep Blorp Review (@asfmag). Writin' teacher at JHU. Tweets mine. All mine.
(2/2): Find Me - Laura van den Berg Severance - Ling Ma Station Eleven - Emily St. John Mandel Leave the World Behind - Rumaan Alam Basically, we’re looking at contemporary works that involve utopias, cacotopias, and dystopias. Fun stuff!