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A wry and bold debut novel, which is at once an irresistible catastrophe waiting to happen and an unflinching exploration of how we narrate the stories of our lives, as an aspiring novelist finds herself stalking—and writing about—her boyfriend’s ex-girlfriend. “I can’t help but compare our worth as writers, as lovers, as women. Is anything solely mine, or will I always dwell in someone else’s shadow?” Twenty-four-year-old bookseller and New Yorker Naomi Ackerman, desperate to write a novel, struggles to find the right story to tell. When, after years of disastrous Tinder dates, she meets Caleb—a perfectly nice guy with a Welsh accent and a unique patience for all of her quirks—she feels she's finally stumbled onto a time-honored subject: love. But then Caleb's ex-girlfriend, Rosemary, enters the scene. When Naomi learns that Rosemary is not safely tucked away overseas as she'd assumed but in fact lives in New York and works in the literary world, she is fundamentally threatened and intrigued in equal measure. On paper, Rosemary sounds like a better version of Naomi—but if they both fell for the same man, they must have something more essential in common. Determined to figure out how their stories intertwine, Naomi's casual Instagram stalking morphs into a full-blown friendship under false pretenses. She can't seem to get herself to quit Rosemary, in whom she discovers an unexpected confidant—and she can't stop writing about her either, having now found a more interesting subject for her nascent novel. As her lies and half-truths spiral out of her control, and fact and fiction become increasingly difficult to separate, Naomi manipulates the most important people in her life—her family, her friends, Caleb, Rosemary, and, perhaps most devastatingly, herself—in pursuit of her craft. Ultimately, she’s forced to decide who and what she's willing to sacrifice to write them all the perfect ending.
love how meta and accurate Rosemary's critique of Naomi's pages are...I find Naomi so 🙄 & hard to relate to because she is so privileged
god i'm hoping there's a twist where rosemary actually always knew what was going on and playing naomi the whole time
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"Compulsively readable" is a bit of a cliche, but it perfectly describes A Novel Obsession. I couldn't look away - rather like a trainwreck - literally reading it into the wee hours, falling asleep only to wake up and instantly start reading again. A sharp, clever, deeply uncomfortable, and slyly dramatic exploration of literature, relationships, and truth vs. fiction. A compelling read for anyone, but a must for anyone who's ever spent too much time discussing the Bad Art Friend article or Cat Person.
Content warnings: Sexual assault, rape, death of cancer, infertility.
Thank you to the publisher for an advance copy in exchange for an honest review!
Though I didn't enjoy being in Naomi's head...and I wasn't surprised at the ending...Caitlin Barasch must've been doing something right because I still felt compelled to finish. Not really sure how to categorize this book as it's kind of weird girl litfic but also sort of mystery/thriller and yet, not enough of any of those. There was a low level tension that petered out in the middle since the stakes weren't high enough, and it takes a long time for consequences to develop. Naomi's behavior was more entitled than unhinged, and while her past traumas could've led the reader to empathize with her, they felt random since these traumas didn't quite connect to her actions in the present.