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Review: After Birth

Tiresome rant in foul-mouthed baby talk

April 2, 2015 12:49
02042015 After Birth hb

By

Monica Porter,

Monica Porter

1 min read

By Elisa Albert
Chatto & Windus, £10.99

Heaven save us from the post-feminist, feminist novel. At least I think that's what American writer Elisa Albert's book is. It's hard to tell, because Albert is a "literary stylist", so she experiments with new forms and isn't always coherent. For example, she doesn't use quotation marks during dialogues, or even tell you who is doing the talking. The narrative jumps irritatingly back and forth and is so heavily strewn with four-letter words that it seems she's trying to break a record.

The thin plot revolves around thirty-something Ari, who has left Brooklyn to live in a "shitbox" town in upstate New York, where her kindly professor husband landed a job at the local university. Giving birth to her first child hurls Ari into a world of clamouring self-pity because she finds (shock!) that babies can be very demanding.

Her main issue, apparently, is the lack of women around to give her sisterly support. Those whom she could call on - relatives, friends, locals - are all, for one reason or another, objects of Ari's contempt. In fact, she spurns most people, and the book is essentially a long rant against the world.

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