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THE BOOK OF GEORGE by Kate  Greathead

THE BOOK OF GEORGE

by Kate Greathead

Pub Date: Oct. 8th, 2024
ISBN: 9781250351029
Publisher: Henry Holt

A novel about the fragility of millennial masculinity.

Greathead’s novel chronicles the eponymous George’s life from childhood to early middle age. The book begins with George’s mother criticizing his father’s spending habits at 12-year-old George’s graduation from a drug-abuse-resistance program. George is aware of his father’s financial shortcomings as well as his mother’s contempt. While he watches Jackass with his sister, he can’t help but feel “implicated in his mother’s disgust with lowbrow contemporary culture, as though he were somehow responsible for it by being a member of the generation it was directed toward.” This disgust for lowbrow culture is also a disgust for performances of masculinity that are neither nice nor successful. When his father dies a few years later of a stroke, George is suspicious of people who exude naïveté or optimism. “Their cheery innocence,” he reflects, “was like an abrasive on a wound.” As George comes of age, he develops an on-again, off-again relationship with a woman named Jenny, who loves him openly, though he will not, at first, say it back. He exhibits outbursts of anger and is so critical of others that Jenny tells him, “Some people go through life trying to build others up….You like to poke holes.” Though George can be unlikable, he is self-aware. “George had been feeling like a loser recently,” Greathead writes toward the end, though he’s been behaving like one for some time. Ultimately, it’s unclear what George wants out of life or how he plans to succeed without leaning on his girlfriend, sister, or mother financially and emotionally. Greathead’s portrayal of an aggrieved white man struggling to find his place in the world is as much a portrait of an unsuccessful artist as a young man as it is a portrait of our times.

A mordantly wry examination of one disgruntled man’s life.