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Look at Me

by Jennifer Egan

Look at Me Cover

Awards

2001 National Book Award Finalist

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

In her first novel since her widely praised debut, The Invisible Circus, Jennifer Egan demonstrates once again her virtuosity at weaving a spellbinding story with language that dazzles. In this boldly ambitious and symphonic novel, she captures the tenor of our times and offers an unsettling glimpse of the future.

Fashion model Charlotte Swenson returns to Manhattan, having just recovered from a catastrophic car accident in her hometown of Rockford, Illinois. The skin of her face is perfect, but behind it lie eighty titanium screws that hold together the bones that were shattered when she hit the unbreakable windscreen of her car.

Unrecognizable to her peers and colleagues, Charlotte finds it impossible to resume her former life. Instead, she floats invisibly through a world of fashion nightclubs and edgy Internet projects, where image and reality are indistinguishable.

During her recovery in Rockford, she had met another Charlotte, the plain-looking teenage daughter of her former best friend. Young Charlotte, alienated from parents and friends, has come under the sway of two men: her uncle, a mentally unstable scholar of the Industrial Revolution, and an enigmatic high school teacher whom she seduces.

In following these tales to their eerie convergence, Look at Me is both a send-up of image culture in America and a mystery of human identity. Egan illuminates the difficulties of shaping an inner life in a culture obsessed with surfaces and asks whether "truth" can have any meaning in an era when reality itself has become a style.

Written with powerful intelligence and grace, Look at Me clearly establishes Jennifer Egan as one of the most daring and gifted novelists of her generation.

Review:

"Arresting.... Look at Me is the real thing — brave, honest, unflinching. [It] is itself a mirror in which we can clearly see the true face of the times in which we live." Francine Prose, The New York Observer

Review:

"Intriguing.... An unlikely blend of tabloid luridness and brainy cultural commentary.... The novel's uncanny prescience gives Look at Me a rare urgency." Time

Review:

"Egan has created some compelling characters and written provocative meditations on our times.... [She] has captured our culture in its edge-city awfulness." The Washington Post Book World

Review:

"Brilliantly unnerving.... A haunting, sharp, splendidly articulate novel." The New York Times

Review:

"Comic, richly imagined, and stunningly written.... An energetic, unorthodox, quintessentially American vision of America." The New Yorker

Review:

"Look at Me is a complicated novel... but the questions it raises are worth following a lifetime of labyrinths toward the answers." Los Angeles Times

Review:

"Prescient and provocative.... The characters... jump from the pages and dare you to care about them.... The prose is crisp and precise.... The pieces fit together at the end with a satisfying click." Philadelphia Inquirer

Review:

"Egan's rich new novel... is about bigger things: double lives; secret selves; the difficulty of really seeing anything in a world so flooded with images." The Nation

Review:

"Egan's take... is surreal and profoundly ironic and exaggerated, but it still rings true.... Beneath it all, she finds characters worth saving." Hartford Courant

Review:

"Breathtaking.... Combines the tautness of a good mystery with the measured, exquisitely articulated detail and emotional landscape of the most literary of narratives.... Sure to leave readers thinking about these very real characters for some time to come." BookPage

Review:

"Riveting.... As the book gains momentum, Egan's writing is both fluid and driven, with wonderful slashes of satire.... A remarkable study of our culture... and of our palpable need to be known." O: The Oprah Magazine

Review:

"Egan's ability to move with ease between sincerity and satire sets Look at Me apart.... Her authentic-feeling details give a sense of unusual immediacy." Vogue

About the Author

Jennifer Egan is the author of The Invisible Circus and the story collection Emerald City. Her stories have been published in such magazines as The New Yorker, Harper's, GQ, Zoetrope, and Ploughshares, and her nonfiction appears frequently in The New York Times Magazine. Egan lives with her husband and son in Brooklyn.

For further information about Jennifer Egan, visit her Web site at www.jenniferegan.com.

Product Details

ISBN:
9780385721356
Author:
Egan, Jennifer
Publisher:
Anchor Books
Subject:
General
Subject:
Models (persons)
Subject:
Teenage girls
Subject:
Identity (psychology)
Subject:
Psychological fiction
Publication Date:
October 2002
Binding:
Paperback
Language:
English
Pages:
432
Dimensions:
8.10x5.18x.95 in. .69 lbs.

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