Synopses & Reviews
Pulitzer Prize finalist Lydia Millet is "one of the most acclaimed novelists of her generation" (Scott Timberg,
Los Angeles Times).
Salon praised her for writing that is "always flawlessly beautiful, reaching for an experience that precedes language itself." The
Village Voice added, "If Kurt Vonnegut were still alive, he would be extremely jealous."
This stunning new novel presents Susan Lindley, a woman adrift after her husband’s death and the dissolution of her family. Embarking on a new phase in her life after inheriting her uncle’s sprawling mansion and its vast collection of taxidermy, Susan decides to restore the neglected, moth-eaten animal mounts, tending to “the fur and feathers, the beaks, the bones and shimmering tails.” Meanwhile an equally derelict human menagerie—including an unfaithful husband and a chorus of eccentric old women—joins her in residence.
In a setting both wondrous and absurd, Susan defends her legacy from freeloading relatives and explores the mansion’s unknown spaces. Funny and heartbreaking, Magnificence explores evolution and extinction, children and parenthood, loss and revelation. The result is the rapturous final act to the critically acclaimed cycle of novels that began with How the Dead Dream.
Review
"[ is] elegant, darkly comic...with overtones variously of Muriel Spark, Edward Gorey and J. G. Ballard, full of contemporary wit and devilish fateful turns for her characters, and then also to knit together into a tapestry of vast implication and ethical urgency, something as large as any writer could attempt: a kind of allegorical elegy for life on a dying planet. Ours, that is." Jonathan Lethem
Review
"Lydia Millet's is a novel of ideas. I mean that as a high compliment, for the ideas Millet invokes are the only ones that matter: life, death, love, longing, extinction, the ongoing existential quandary of what we are doing here.... [A]n ambitious book, not so much for the sweep of its action, which is essentially domestic, but for its deep and nuanced investigation of inner life...." The Guardian
Review
"Millet's prose, which is both sensitive and strange... creates a thick atmosphere that immediately pulls the reader deep into this saga of love, death, sex, and taxidermy." David Ulin Los Angeles Times
Review
"...[W]arm, moving, funny, earnest, hopeful, honest, and engaged in a way at odds with current literary fashion...Millet's lush prose has you in her thrall from the start." NewYorker.com
Review
"...[U]unnervingly talented Lydia Millet completes a trilogy... each stands independently; you can read just one of them if you please. But you won't want to, any more than you'd want to leave Chez Panisse after the appetizer.... There is something of Paula Fox in the way Millet provokes deep thinking without being overbearing. But I hate to compare Millet to anyone; she's truly an original." Jenny Hendrix Boston Globe
Review
"Millet is simply an incredible writer. Her prose displays the exceedingly rare combination of philosophical introspection with poetic grace and flourish." Mary Pols San Francisco Chronicle
Review
"[A] novel of ideas or philosophy, disguised as a portrait of one woman's midlife upheaval." Nicholas Mancusi Daily Beast
Review
"Millet's writing is as lush as the house Susan lives in. There's a marvelous musicality to her prose; she's a writer who tackles human emotions with scientific precision and an artist's voice.... There's a cataloging going on here of the ways that people navigate the world once their world has shifted; Millet does a fine job of breathing life into people who are surrounded by dead things." Laura Miller Salon
Review
"Starred review. [An] elegant meditation on death and what it means to be alone, even you're not...
Review
"Starred review. Millet brings her searching, bitterly funny, ecologically attuned trilogy of Los Angeles-based novels (, 2008; , 2011) to a haunting crescendo. ...Millet is extraordinarily agile and powerful here, moving from light to shadow like a stalking lioness...." Publishers Weekly
Review
"... draws a detailed map of the healing process of an adulterous wife who suddenly finds herself a widow.... The deeply honest, beautiful meditations on love, grief and guilt give way to a curlicued comic-romantic mystery complete with a secret basement and assorted eccentrics." Booklist
Review
"There's much to explore in , which is ambitious, often funny and deliciously provocative. One needn't have read the entire series to be consumed by its pleasures, but by the time you reach its beautiful end, considerable comfort lies in the existence of two more novels in which to delight in Millet's writing and imagination." Kirkus Reviews
Review
"Starred review. [A] refreshingly buoyant and unsentimental tale...Millet's spare but powerful prose...calls to mind the work of J. M. Coetzee." Christine Thomas Miami Herald
Synopsis
A woman embarks on a dazzling new phase in her life after inheriting a sprawling mansion and its vast collection of taxidermy.
Synopsis
This stunning new novel presents Susan Lindley, a woman adrift after her husband s death and the dissolution of her family. Embarking on a new phase in her life after inheriting her uncle s sprawling mansion and its vast collection of taxidermy, Susan decides to restore the neglected, moth-eaten animal mounts, tending to the fur and feathers, the beaks, the bones and shimmering tails. Meanwhile an equally derelict human menagerie including an unfaithful husband and a chorus of eccentric old women joins her in residence.
In a setting both wondrous and absurd, Susan defends her legacy from freeloading relatives and explores the mansion s unknown spaces. Funny and heartbreaking, Magnificenceexplores evolution and extinction, children and parenthood, loss and revelation. The result is the rapturous final act to the critically acclaimed cycle of novels that began withHow the Dead Dream.
"
About the Author
Lydia Millet is the author of the New York Times Notable Book Ghost Lights and eight other works of fiction. Her short story collection Love in Infant Monkeys was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. She lives with her children outside Tucson, Arizona.