Cover Image: My Absolute Darling

My Absolute Darling

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Member Reviews

This was a harrowing read, but so gripping and despite its darkness, so beautiful.

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I appreciated the opportunity to read this book but sadly I was disappointed by it. In the end I felt it was yet another book about child abuse, and whilst i learnt a lot about different guns, and the narrative was peppered with philosophical and literary references, I felt I learnt nothing new about abusive relationships. I also found it difficult to believe that Turtle was left so physically able following her various traumas and self treatments,

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Extremely fascinating story with a lead character in Turtle that I'll never forget. Awesome awesome book!

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Really hard to read due to the sensitive content but I found myself drawn into turtles's world. Well worth slogging through

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Turtle is perfectly named. Hard as nails on the outside, vulnerable and adrift on the inside. A slow burner, this breathtaking book sets the scene so skilfully that the reader feels each skipped heartbeat as the menacing, charismatic Martin steps closer to the event horizon. Strongly recommended.

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This book is gripping, from the first paragraph to the tense final chapters. It is frustrating and heartbreaking and harrowing and hopeful. A fantastic psychological portrayal of abuse, I would recommend this to everyone and anyone - even if just to understand how other people may view the world so differently.

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I began reading this book and felt bombardes with tons of things going on and I felt like I was either out of the loop or was missing half the book.
Not for me, sorry.

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I just finished an arc of MY PRECIOUS DARLING by Gabriel Tallent. It will probably be my favorite book of 2017. Not since A LITTLE LIFE have I read a book that kept me reading all night into daylight for two days in a row. It's stunning, shocking, emotional and beautiful. Unbelievably fantastic writer. Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read this amazing novel that I will not soon forget.

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Wow, this is a blistering, raw, edgy, honest, risky piece of writing! Tallent (prescient surname!) has exploded onto the literary scene with this book which left me just blown away. The content is horrific in parts so beware of you're a sensitive reader, but it never falls into the gratuitous, the sentimental or the one-dimensional.

While Turtle's voice dominates, it's her father, Martin, who is perhaps the greater achievement: it's too easy to write a monster, but while Martin certainly does some monstrous things, he's also highly intelligent, an intellectual reader, charismatic, a man who profoundly loved his wife and loves his daughter, had a troubled relationship with his own father, and has a self-destructive ability to look deep into his own soul: <i> Christ! How have I become this man I am now, set in my ways, scared like he was, set like he was, and I hate this, I never wanted to be this man.</i> In his own distorted way, he adores Turtle as the most beautiful thing in his life: <i> Do you know what you are? The only numinous thing in a dark and profane world, and without you, nihilism.</i> <spoiler> And while Turtle is certainly his victim, she's also the weapon he forges against himself, in that unstoppable, inevitable rush towards the nihilism he foresees.</spoiler>

The scenes of the book are immensely detailed, almost set out like scenes from a play, and we can feel the shifting emotional tides between people, seeping into the atmosphere. Set against the anger, the violence and the blood of the content is a gorgeously lyrical writing style, an attention to individual words and the way words fuse in an alchemical process.

I love the way Tallent doesn't overwrite: he doesn't feel the need to spell everything out for us, to excuse or explain with easy psychologising, and leaves spaces in the text for us to ponder on (<spoiler> did his wife leave or commit suicide? Did his abuse of Turtle drive her away, or did he turn to Turtle after the loss of his wife?</spoiler>). The ending, too, avoids easy neatness, and remains open-ended as real life so often is.

So this is a tense and intense book, not an easy throwaway read... but a superbly brilliant one.

Also posted on Amazon as a Vine review

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My Absolute Darling is a dark and unputdownable novel about a terrifying situation and mindset forced onto a teenage girl and her battle to escape this life she is so used to. Turtle is a fourteen-year-old who lives with her father in a house filled with guns and supplies for the apocalypse he believes will be inevitable. He tells her how much he loves her, but she has never known a friend and is trapped by his creed and rules. The time comes for Turtle to fight to survive and to learn to escape from all she has ever known.

Tallent writes with a distinctively detailed style that carefully captures the ordered world in which Turtle lives and depicts her unnerving mindset as someone who has grown up knowing love and pain deeply entwined. She is a compelling character: heartbreaking in her internalised hatred and her difficulty relating to anyone, clearly intelligent and adaptable, and hard to forget once the book is put down. The narrative unfolds with tension, closely focusing on an event or occasion then jumping forward in a tightly paced manner.

The paranoia of her monstrous father is contrasted with the hippy attitudes of other locals, showing the difference between a distrust of The Man and an all-consuming belief in protecting someone who is actually being deeply scarred in those attempts. Apart from a few references by other characters, it is easy to forget the modern setting of the novel, which both gives it a timeless feel and shows Turtle’s disconnect from the world. Altogether, the writing style and seeing it all from Turtle’s perspective makes the reader feel unnerved and trapped, really getting across the horror of what is going on despite it not being described in a hysterical way.

To read the novel is to be horrified at times and to wish it was possible to reach into the narrative and make things better, in a similar way to books like Yanagihara’s A Little Life. Tallent creates a paranoid and abusive world that can be difficult to read at times, but also can be uplifting and gives a voice to a character who so often keeps to virtual silence.

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I thought My Absolute Darling was outstandingly good. It is beautifully written, remarkably insightful and completely gripping.

This is the story of 12-year-old Julia "Turtle" Alveson who lives with her survivalist father on the fringes of society in Mendocino, California. She is skilled in guns, survival skills and so on, but at sea with other people and in social situations. Told entirely from Turtle's point of view, we see her struggles with understanding her father's obsessive and abusive behaviour which she (and probably he) believes to be what love is. As events and growing maturity begin to make her more aware, the tension between what she has believed and what she begins to recognise as reality grows and Turtle has to wrestle with where her future lies and how, if at all, she can realise it.

This doesn't sound like a great read on the face of it, but it is. I genuinely found it hard to put this book down; the story is gripping, with some passages of incredible tension and real adventure, and Gabriel Tallent takes us right inside that young woman's head with her confusion, self-doubt (often spilling into self-loathing) and resilience in a way which I have seldom experienced. The portraits of her and of her monstrous father are fantastically real, and I found the entire thing completely convincing. Be warned that there are some quite horrifying scenes of child abuse, but they are absolutely justified in the context and excellently judged - a world away from the often offensively facile use of child abuse as a theme in run-of-the-mill thrillers.

The prose is excellent. Gabriel Tallent writes in a measured, unmelodramatic but rather lyrical style, which brings the people, especially Turtle, wonderfully to life. Just as a tiny example, we get sentences like this: "She waits there in the grass, feeling her every thought stored up and inarticulate within her," and this sort of brilliant distillation of internal experience shines through the book. The sense of place is excellent and dialogue is completely convincing; I especially liked some wonderful episodes of the jokey, wordy, literate chatter of two High School boys as it contrasted with Turtle's near-silent inarticulacy.

I find it hard to express quite how good I thought this book was. It is a rare combination of an utterly gripping story, excellent writing and genuine depth of content. Very, very warmly recommended.

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