Reader Score
64%
64% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Mixed
Based on 25 reviews on
Winner of the Goldsmiths Prize
Named a Best Book of the Year (So Far) by The New Yorker and Vulture
From Rachel Cusk, author of the Outline trilogy, comes this startling, exhilarating novel that once again expands the notion of what fiction can be and do.
Midway through his life, the artist G begins to paint upside down. Eventually, he paints his wife upside down. He also makes her ugly. The paintings are a great success.
In Paris, a woman is attacked by a stranger in the street. Her attacker flees, but not before turning around to contemplate her victim, like an artist stepping back from a canvas.
At the age of twenty-two, the painter G leaves home for a new life in another country, far from the disapproval of her parents. Her paintings attract the disapproval of the man she later marries.
When a mother dies, her children confront her legacy: the stories she told, the roles she assigned to them, the ways she withheld her love. Her death is a kind of freedom.
Parade is a novel that demolishes the conventions of storytelling. It surges past the limits of identity, character, and plot to tell the story of G, an artist whose life contains many lives. Rachel Cusk is a writer and visionary like no other, who turns language upside down to show us our world as it really is.
Rachel Cusk was born in Canada in 1967 and spent much of her childhood in Los Angeles before finishing her education at St Mary's Convent, Cambridge. She read English at New College, Oxford, and has travelled extensively in Spain and Central America. She is the author of six novels. The first, Saving Agnes (1993), won the Whitbread First Novel Award. A Life's Work: On Becoming a Mother (2001) is a personal exploration of motherhood. In The Lucky Ones (2003) she uses a series of five narratives, loosely linked by the experience of parenthood, to write of life's transformations, of what separates us from those we love and what binds us to those we no longer understand. In 2003, Rachel Cusk was nominated by Granta magazine as one of 20 'Best of Young British Novelists'. Her latest novel is Outline (2014).
"Rachel Cusk has been praised for her gut renovation of the novel in her Outline trilogy. Now, she’s back with a new novel that demolishes traditional storytelling conventions. In Parade, an artist starts painting upside down, finally reaching great acclaim."
"Cusk's... newest book out this year continues to blend fiction and memoir, but this time it turns its eye to the art world with a plot structured in such a unique way, it is an artwork itself... an intellectual and sharp reflection on art, men, and women, and self-expression."
"Cusk’s new novel, “Parade,” is an experiment that foregrounds theme, striking its notes — on gender, artmaking, motherhood, freedom, death — with force... Cusk’s work has this power, to disturb and unsettle, to subtly rearrange the space of one’s mind."