Cover Image: The Rachel Incident

The Rachel Incident

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Member Reviews

I loved this book. I loved it so, so much. I related SO strongly to Rachel, I felt like I was her and we were living the story together.

I laughed aloud (cackled) at several points, I gritted my teeth in distress, I nodded along sagely like we were actual besties and she was telling me her deepest secrets.

This is a fantastic coming of age story that every late twenties to mid thirties adult will be able to relate to, and I will 100% be buying a physical copy when it's released.

(I have posted it on Goodreads but it wont let me link it! Under Olivia Turner)

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I adored the novel and the writing of Caroline. It was an exciting narrative that provided unexpected character development. I really loved the way Caroline developed her story with present day and past, it didnt feel forced but rather like you're just in a room chatting with a friend hearing about her wild youth. It was a lovely story of Rachel finding her strength and doing hard things, while making some choices that as a 3rd party gut you but also can understand. Loved this read, thank you so much for letting me advance read. Cant wait to recommend it.

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Thanks to NetGalley and Knopf for this advance readers copy, in exchange for an honest review. As The Rachel Incident opens, we learn that the narrator is telling us a story from years ago. In present day, she is a semi-successful journalist and pregnant and we come to learn that the story will be about a sequence of events that eventually lead her to that present state. These events are instigated by her newfound relationship with James, her best friend, her married professor, and ultimately how their lives all become intertwined.

It took a little time for this story to take shape for me and to get a sense of where we were headed. But, despite this, I still very much enjoyed this book in large part because of the writing. Within the first 50 pages, I had many highlights and lines that just struck me as both well written and so finely able to capture seemingly mundane emotions/experiences. The characters is this book experience love, loss, loneliness, shame, etc. and while I’ve never personally endured the characters situations, I could still very much empathize with how it must have felt.

By the midway point in the book, I was very invested in the story and our characters. I was also happy with how the book ended, having both a heartwarming and bittersweet undertone to it. Per the editors note at the start of the book, she read or rather consumed this book within a sitting or two and had to share it out as soon as she read it— I had the same experience and will be eager to discuss with other readers once the book is published.

I’d recommend this book to literary fictions fans and Sally Rooney fans, as this book reminded me a great deal of hers.

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A beautiful coming of age novel with some good laugh out loud moments. I love quirky characters, which Rachel certainly is.

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As someone named Rachel, I have been waiting for someone to write a book with this title for a long time! It made me glad I didn't grow up in Catholic, conservative Ireland because so much of the stress in the book was because of their surroundings and culture. It was a lot of fun but with a sad, realistic core.

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Beautifully written with laugh out loud lines, I enjoyed this coming of age story set in Cork 2010 during the Irish recession. Rachel is an awkward uni student navigating work, school, relationships, love, being a woman with restricted reproductive rights, and finding her place in the world.

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The Rachel Incident takes its sweet time developing the important relationships within it and takes even longer to convince you why you should care about them. Regardless, Rachel had a very strong voice— it was easy to relate to her feelings of codependency and not wanting to seem like a burden, feeling like everyone is judging you for something you didn’t even do— and the prose was compelling enough to keep me reading. I never found myself bored and was always looking forward to seeing what would happen next. In the end, I enjoyed it much more than I did when I started reading it.

On a note that could be construed as nitpicky, I don’t particularly care about a straight character’s point of view on gay culture. Further, the author stated on her Instagram that she wanted to write a book about loving men; I don’t feel like this is a concept the literature world lacks. I would even go as far to say it’s something the lit world is overrun with. What the author says on her own time doesn’t technically have anything to do with the contents of the book itself, but if someone, like me, doesn’t care too much for books that are mostly about men, their experience with this book may vary.

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Thank you Netgalley for this ARC of The Rachel Incident by Caroline O'Donoghue.

Oh wow, this is a novel that packs a punch, I will not soon forget it!

Rachel is a lost twenty one year old woman, she is obsessed with her gay roommate James, and infatuated with her professor Dr. Byrne. And after a while of naively pursuing him, she finally finds herself tangled up in his life, but not in any way she ever could have imagined.

To try to recap any more than that would not do it justice. One of the things that (IMO) make a book great is when I feel like I'm practically a part of the story. When the character does something reckless and I can shake my head and think "classic Rachel." When I can really see their rundown apartment filled with things that they never bought for themselves. And when I can feel their absolute despair and helplessness of the situation that they never asked for, but definitely caused.

I was so enthralled with this story, EVEN THOUGH the characters were usually acting poorly and you wanted to shake them. This was still a deeply endearing story full of gasp out loud moments, love, friendship, and plenty of redemption.

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When Emily Reardon, a book publicist for Knopf, reached out and recommended, “The Rachel Incident,” I was intrigued. The editor’s note at the beginning of the book stated that the editor stayed up all night reading this book and postponed her Thanksgiving dinner to finish it. I read it in a day too. And if you know, you know if I read a book in a day, it’s good.

Easy to read, the book is about Rachel and her James’. James, her gay best friend, and later James- better known as “Carey,” her sometimes boyfriend. Set in Cork and later England, the story introduces Rachel pregnant and post grad, but not certain how many years. She reflects back on her time at university and as the editor points out in her note, “coming of age in an economic recession.” The intricacies of the relationships – both romantic and friendship bled through the pages. Rachel seems lost and is easily swept into James’ (her bestfriend’s) orbit after meeting him at the bookshop where they both work. She anchors herself to him, and the story rides their rollercoaster friendship. James, at first is adamant about being straight, and only after falling for a forbidden lover, comes out and is able to be his most authentic self. The story is about identity and finding yourself in those vulnerable years when you are constantly judged by what you do, who you spend time with and what trajectory your life is on. Caroline O’Donoghue’s writing brought life to these characters I was happy to spend a day with. I read a quote once that said something along the lines of the saddest part of finishing a book is not knowing what those characters are doing anymore, you don’t know what they’re eating for breakfast or where they live. This is true of the friends I’m leaving after finishing “The Rachel Incident,” though I’m sure I’ll be thinking of them for a long time.

Thanks to NetGalley for allowing me to read and review this title early. And special thanks to Emily Reardon of Knopf for sending this one to my inbox. Super thanks to Caroline O’Donoghue for giving me these characters and this story, a highlight for my weekend, and a book that will certainly be found on my shelves once it’s published in June.

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The best book I’ve read in a while. A story of coming of age and friendship that had me eager to pick it up whenever I had a spare minute.

Rachel’s first person voice draws you into her story, which at first glance is nothing remarkable, but becomes increasingly so as the tale unfolds and we dip into her final year at Cork University and the time that followed. Her intense friendship with James looms large, but he is not the only perfectly characterised player in this story, which quickly draws you in - and keeps you there as you navigate the twists and turns of this time in Rachel’s life.

Rachel’s story is set against a background of 2010 Cork, and Ireland in the throes of recession and debate around abortion. It will resonate most with children of the 80s and 90s who will surely identify with or relate to parts of her experience. Overall, a powerful tale of friendship and the young female experience.

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The Rachel Incident is a sweet coming-of-age story about Rachel Murray, a Cork University student who comes to learn the meaning of friendship, love, intimacy and betrayal, from 3 siignificant men in her life - her roomate/best-friend James, her professor Dr Byrne, and her lover "Carey."

Written from the first person perspective of someone with hindsight, it takes a thoughtful look at these emotional experiences with the backdrop of the social, economic, and political issues in Ireland at the time. The author, Caroline O'Donoghue, illustrates how growing up changes perspectives on intensely personal issues of our past. in a light, humorous but insightful way.

Reminiscent of work by Sally Rooney, I would certainly recommend this story to any Book Club. Thank you to Knopf and Net Galley for providing me with an ARC.

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Many thanks to NetGalley and Knopf for the eARC of this lovely book!

As an American of Irish ancestry I was very interested to read this character-driven novel set in Cork during the horrible post-2008 recession years, during which I was also attempting to launch my career, albeit on a different continent and in a different industry. I don't know anything about the author's life, but this read like autofiction to me--a very realistic slow burn story of complicated friendships and romances among young (and a few not-so-young) people in those trying years.

Also the author's prose is fantastic; there are so many wonderful spit-take lines, I lost count.

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3.5 stars. The story follows a young girl, Rachel, on her journey to adulthood. She struggles with many things a lot of us did at a young age. Finding yourself. She, along with her best friend James do their best to live vivacious young while trying to figure out what the hell to do with their lives. There are some triggering topics in this book, and hopefully, a trigger guide will be added to the final copy.
While it was an entertaining book, there were parts that seemed unimportant and could have been flushed out better. A good weekend read for someone to enjoy a quick standalone coming of age story.

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The Rachel Incident by Caroline O’Donoghue is a “banger”. I loved this book. 5stars. It reminded me of my early twenties fresh out of college and trying to figure out who I was and what I was going to do.
Rachel is finishing up her English degree but the economy is bad in Cork Ireland. Her best friend and her leave in a run down apartment and have big dreams and even worse relationships. This is a coming of age novel but has the heart and feel of real life. Must read!
I want to thank NetGalley for giving me the opportunity to read an advanced copy of this amazing novel.

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When Rachel meets James, it’s love at first sight, but James has other plans. He invites Rachel to be his roommate and friendship they forge changes their lives forever. When Rachel falls in love with her married professor, James helps her devise a way to seduce him, but Fred has other plans. What emerges is a web of secrets that intertwines James, Rachel, and Fred for the rest of their lives.

I did not realize going into this one that it was a coming of age novel. This is a genre I enjoy, but it is very hit and miss for me. I found this one enjoyable and Rachel grappled with several things that I too have dealt with. There are some major trigger warnings with this book, especially for women, but the way they were portrayed was delicately and deliberate. The friendships in this book were complex and well developed and written.

The one thing that gets me with coming of age is just how naïve we all are when we’re young. But its how we grow and develop that matters.

Check this amazing book June 27th.

Thank you to the publisher Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage, and Anchor, @aaknopf, and Netgalley @netgalley for this e-ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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I am a fan of Caroline’s books but this is in a league of its own. I couldn’t put it down and it is of those books I wish I could so I could read it again for the first time . I adore Rachel and James, who are both entirely human characters. A fantastic coming of age story that spoke to my millennial heart.

Thank you to the publishers and net galley for the ARC

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Round up to 4.5
Even though I'm not entirely certain what I just read, I loved it. I love the human- and real-ness of it all. I loved finding glamor in the gritty, the descriptions of what best friend relationships go through. I feel like I read a love story that isn't billed as a love story.

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This is the story of a young woman's evolution from child to adult, and all the highs and lows she experienced. She meets her best friend, goes to university, experiences crazy dating adventures, finds and loses work, makes and loses money, finds and loses love. In one of her deepest lows, she is backed into a strange corner and finds an unusual solution, which turns into a defining moment of her life. She finds a way to rise from the ashes of her burned dreams. Rachel is resilient and interesting and entertaining, and her story is authentic and relevant despite being fictional.

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If you've ever wondered if anyone would write the autobiography of an English major this book has your answer. Yes! Who'd of thunk it? This English major would have said "never". But here's Rachel Murray, a 21-year-old senior at Cork College in Ireland who manages to talk herself into a seminar spot in Dr. Byrne's seminar, thus beginning a complicated narrative whose ending you will not guess.

Caroline O' Donoghue writes like a cross between the best kind of English Major (maybe with a PhD in creative writing?) and a stand-up comedy writer with a gift fit for Saturday Night Live comedy material. I must warn you that the book starts off slow but picks up momentum quickly and gets better and better as it goes along. It's clever and very funny.

The middle-class daughter of two dentists caught in the 2008 recession, Rachel is forced to work part time in a bookshop to pay her tuition. There she meets James, a closeted and virginal gay man. They become roommates and best friends. That's about all you need to know to relish every word of the rest of this novel.

Thanks to Knopf and NetGalley for letting me read and review this marvelous book. I'm going back to read some of O'Donoghue's previous works.

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Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher Knopf Doubleday for the arc of this book. It's going to be a huge hit.
It doesn't seem like it will at the start. Indeed, the reviews that proclaim it "hilarious" and "brilliantly funny" are wholly off the mark.
The beginning plagues us with the notion of the Irishness of Ireland, and it's a little contrived. Rachel is a student working in a bookstore where she meets the platonic love of her life, gay best friend, James. James helps her plot to seduce her professor, whom she has an almighty crush on, and at that point, you get hooked.
I read this in a 3 day blur, thinking about it when I wasn't reading it.
As the story warmed up, the writing got better and better. At the beginning, I viewed it as something Cecilia Ahern would have churned out, but it was a genuinely interesting story which left me scouring the internet to discover: Was this based on a true story? It certainly felt like it was and not just because the backdrop was so real. Ireland really was impoverished back then. I also emigrated to England and clung a little too hard to my Irishness whilst there. This history, circling back on teen/early 20s crises and the subsequent abortion referendum is a unique place in Ireland's history and I'm glad Caroline O' Donoghue was the one to tell it.

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