Sunday 21 January 2018

Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, Gail Honeyman

I was blown away by this book - it was a gift and I was expecting something more vacuous. It is brilliantly written. The central character has trouble fitting into the world and Honeyman makes us see why people can't bond with her, but shows the reader someone completely relatable. Oliphant makes hilarious, cutting observations which make the book a joy, even though the central themes are heavy. 

Primarily the novel is about loneliness - how a functioning young woman with a job can go home on a Friday evening and not speak to anyone until she goes back to work on Monday. She is disdainful of her colleagues who openly make fun of her and through the descriptions of her clothes and flat she doesn't seem to have any outward personality.

Oliphant's story is dramatic and in some ways this is annoying. I can see why Honeyman made that decision, though I feel it was a pragmatic one - for publishers and bookshops. She makes the point she wanted to and it is brilliant to read something so affecting and empathy-inducing, though it doesn't take dramatic circumstances to make someone disconnected from the world and unable to find a place and their people. Also, I think on some level everyone both struggles with loneliness and somehow contributes to another's sense of it. Having said that, Honeyman has begun conversations and opened thinking paths with a novel that has a weight and joy to it.