Reader Score
71%
71% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 8 reviews on
A virtuosic, radical reimagining of the systems novel by a "rampaging, mirthful genius" (Elizabeth McKenzie).
Everything that happened was repetition. But it was repetition with a difference. So she dragged along in a spiral, trusting to this form. Manhattan, 2014. It's an unseasonably warm Thursday in November and Erin Adamo is locked out of her apartment. Her husband has just left her and meanwhile her keys are in her coat, which she abandoned at her parents' apartment when she exited mid-dinner after her father--once again--lost control. Erin takes refuge in the library of the university where she is a grad student. Her bag contains two manuscripts she's written, along with a monograph by a faculty member who's recently become embroiled in a bizarre scandal. Erin isn't sure what she's doing, but a small, mostly unconscious part of her knows: within these documents is a key she's needed all along. With unflinching precision, Life Is Everywhere captures emotional events that hover fitfully at the borders of visibility and intelligibility, showing how the past lives on, often secretly and at the expense of the present. It's about one person on one evening, reckoning with heartbreak--a story that, to be fully told, unexpectedly requires many others, from the history of botulism to an enigmatic surrealist prank. Multifarious, mischievous, and deeply humane, Lucy Ives's latest masterpiece rejoices in what a novel, and a self, can carry."Brilliantly berserk. . . . This disorienting but thrilling opening gambit is cinematic, like a view from space that pans swiftly down into a single pore on a human face. It prepares the reader for the wild ride ahead, for the grand sweep, the layering of chronologies, the manifold references and acts of repetition. . . . In its spirited play with literary history real and imagined, Life Is Everywhere bears a resemblance to Shola von Reinhold's extraordinary 2020 novel, LOTE. Ives' story-within-a-story also recalls 1001 Arabian Nights, Vladimir Nabokov's Pale Fire and Laurence Sterne's Tristram Shandy. . . . Its depiction of department dynamics is so pitch perfect as to be truly disconcerting to anyone with personal experience. . . . Ives is capable of virtuosic control -- there are at least 10 different kinds of writing in this book, and all are carried off so masterfully it's almost frightening."--Nina Renata Aron, Los Angeles Times
"One of the year's most impressive books in any genre. . . . Lucy Ives' new novel is unconventional and resourceful, sorrowful and perceptive, a challenging, rewarding book full of irreverent humor, rich imagery and engrossing digressions. . . . In Life Is Everywhere, she's written the sort of book that eludes all but the most talented of novelists."--Kevin Canfield, Minneapolis Star Tribune "Ives possesses an enthralling emotional and psychological acuity, a seemingly bottomless store of knowledge and a thrilling wit, all of which she applies to the systems under which we live -- and how we manage to live within or outside them."--Lynn Steger Strong, Los Angeles Times "Life is Everywhere shatters any kind of straightforward narrative arc in favor of a collage of shards that emphasizes the tone, atmosphere, and the general experience of life in the world at a particular moment. And it wouldn't work were Ives not a Big Ideas writer on the level of Gaddis, or DeLillo, or Wallace. Fortunately for all of us, she is. . . . Lucy Ives has proven herself to be one of our greatest under-the-radar geniuses, but an achievement like Life Is Everywhere demands attention."--James Webster, The Rumpus "Among the most audacious, effective, and ambitious books of recent vintage. . . . Ives refracts a novel of multitudinous brilliance and luminosity, hammering away at convention and the well-trod path with the confidence and skill of an accomplished, fearless writer. It is a credit to both her vision and her publisher's constitution that Life Is Everywhere, as wide-ranging and risk-taking a novel to be found this side of Infinite Jest, never once feels restrained. . . . Life Is Everywhere is a total success."--Dan White, Chicago Review of Books