
Bones & All
A Novel
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Narrated by:
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Julia Knippen
About this listen
Maren Yearly is a young woman who wants the same things we all do. She wants to be someone people admire and respect. She wants to be loved. But her secret, shameful needs have forced her into exile. She hates herself for the bad thing she does, for what it's done to her family and her sense of identity; for how it dictates her place in the world and how people see her - how they judge her. She didn't choose to be this way.
Because Maren Yearly doesn't just break hearts, she devours them. Ever since her mother found Penny Wilson's eardrum in her mouth when Maren was just two years old, she knew life would never be normal for either of them. Love may come in many shapes and sizes, but for Maren, it always ends the same-with her hiding the evidence and her mother packing up the car.
But when her mother abandons her the day after her 16th birthday, Maren goes looking for the father she has never known, and finds much more than she bargained for along the way.
Faced with a world of fellow eaters, potential enemies, and the prospect of love, Maren realizes she isn't only looking for her father, she's looking for herself.
Camille DeAngelis' Bones & All is an astonishingly original coming-of-age tale that is at once a gorgeously written horror story as well as a mesmerizing meditation on female power and sexuality.
©2015 Camille DeAngelis (P)2015 Camille DeAngeliseverything was great about this book
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Interesting yet somewhat disappointing.
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For example, it is physically impossible to grind bones with milk teeth. There is no explanation of how the eaters actually manage to eat people who are far bigger and stronger than them. It would be physically impossible for a baby to eat an entire adult person - the food has to go somewhere!!
Despite the technicality flaws, it enjoyed the book itself and am looking forward to seeing the film.
Interesting...
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twilight level
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On a straight reading of this, there are several things that I highly doubt are physically/biologically possible. You also have to suspend your disbelief when it comes to the police/forensic investigation of any of the disappearances. The sheer number of incredible coincidences are also hard to believe.
In fact, it’s these facts that make me wonder whether the intention was never for this book to be read on a face-value level, but was always meant to be read as an allegory for marginalisation, teenage angst and the state of society.
However sceptical I am, this book does stay with you long after you’ve read it though - for me, it left a kind of hollow, unsettled feeling.
I think it will be really interesting to see how Luca Guadagnino adapts this story. The book is both meandering and very much fixed inside Maren’s head, so the POV transition will undoubtedly give this a different, fresh feel.
One thing I did genuinely like about the book that the subtlety with which Lee’s feelings/motives are translated to the reader through Maren’s POV. From what I’ve seen of the trailer so far, the film is being marketed as a road trip romance. Considering the very particular conundrum presented in the book, it will be particularly interesting to see how that angle is conveyed on screen. Indeed, I’m fully prepared for Russell and Chalamet to break my heart with their performances.
I think this is the kind of book where time and distance might facilitate a more nuanced reflection, however these were my first thoughts.
It will be interested to see how the film approaches this
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Worse than Twilight
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The film was better.
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Characters enter the story and leave suddenly despite acting contrary to their personality (a fatherly figure that kept tabs on his distant son throughout his life, then suddenly decides to attack his granddaughter because she found out about their relationship? A guy who considered suicide after losing his teenage love, but stayed alive to take care of his sister, then gives up on life when he saves another life interest's life?). I wanted to treat this as a coming of age, and feminist empowerment tale, but the protagonist only reaches that point completely out of the blue by the end, without any character building whatsoever in the meantime.
And now I'm reading some reviews mentioning that the author meant to write an allegory of meat eating as cannibalism. B**ch are you for real? This wasteful cannibalism of consuming empty calories without feeling full, could have easily been an allegory on consumerism. But meat eating, really? Not even gonna start mentioning how backwards that is (with meat eating being more dense in calories and protein than plants).
Luckily, the book is relatively short, and so was the time wasted on it.
Hopefully the movie will be better than this?
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Ludicrous
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