Reviews

The Gin Closet, by Leslie Jamison

kjboldon's review against another edition

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3.0

This was a tough read. Told from two viewpoints, adrift-in-her-20s Stella, who helps her grandmother to die, then sets out in search of her estranged aunt. And Tillie, the aunt, whose rebelliousness and alcoholism led to the estrangement. There are no happy endings, here, or particularly likeable characters for those who want or need that sort of thing. For me, only Tillie reached three dimensions. Stella was more a cloud of inference I drew from her circumstances, rather than a discernible-to-me character, and since her POV was half the book, I felt this lack deeply.

The many encomiums on the cover and inside note that the writing is beautiful and that Jamison, who has gone on to achieve fame with her essays, is a writer to watch. These are all true. And yet. SO MANY SIMILES. I could feel the writer writing in the background, trying, reaching for beautiful language. And there is plenty of it there! But, and I wrote this about the first novel of another Iowa Writers Workshop grad, when they're this thick on the ground, the really great ones don't stand out. On page 130, anesthesia is compared to a serious conversation after several glasses of wine, then something compared to tree roots, then pain like sutures with seams and a drawstring. The figurative language, to me, after a while, felt exhausting.

In the end, though, the relationship between Tillie and Stella, and the complicated emotions, drew me through to the very end. Here's Tillie, on p 187: "But the times me and Stella fought were good ones, in their way. Like she took me seriously. This was what happened when lives got close and tangled."

If you like complicated, messy characters and complex relationships between women, this has a lot to offer.

Also, the cover, of a headless young woman sitting on the floor in an undergarment, is terrible.

a_calame's review

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dark emotional reflective sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.75

claudiakarmina's review against another edition

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dark emotional reflective sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

mfconvery's review against another edition

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1.0

This debut was a melodramatic piling on of every disfunction the author could conjure. Additionally, the characters were not simply unlikeable but also unbelievable and underdeveloped.

hollsbookshelf's review

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reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5


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angiehoer7's review against another edition

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4.0

I liked the different perspectives of the same events from the character’s eyes. The ending was not well written. It was inconsistent with the character and story

Favorite passages:

You make what happens next

My mother knew that money didn’t come from nowhere. Money only showed up, she said, from someone

eating myself sick between the outsize dresses of another wom-an’s brokedown dreams.

There was an emptiness that I filled with other people’s secrets.

this was what the sedative had done. It had not protected me, exactly; it had protected me from wanting to protect myself.

the salted wound of memory

This was what happened when lives got close and tangled.

It’s like you need to let the feeling break you into little pieces before you can collect them again

Excerpt from: "The Gin Closet" by Leslie Jamison. Scribd.
This material may be protected by copyright.

Read this book on Scribd: https://www.scribd.com/book/224405966






stormyereads's review against another edition

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5.0

Heartbreaking. Poetic. A devastatingly accurate examination of the binds of family in the face of addicion. Loved it.

amaandaplz's review

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dark emotional reflective sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

I loved the writing, the intricacies of each (very flawed, very human) character and their relationship with one another. Despite the seemingly popular contrary opinion, I love a well done autobiographical fiction; and this novel, inspired by the author's own family/estranged Aunt, definitely fell into the catergory of successfully done autobiographical fiction for me. I was really emotional upon finishing it, which is usually an indicator that the book did something great. I only kept that fifth star because especially towards the middle of the book the pace seemed to slow a bit too much for me. I know my attention span has been just absolutely disintegrating more and more each day, but I still hope for a book to pull me in so much that I can't stop binging it until it's finished within a day or two. And I certainly didn't get that here, I read this book throughout probably 3 weeks, which is very long for a book for me, especially with such fun to read characters I'm not sure why I didn't have that binge urge I always hope to get from a book.
Spoiler My only other, and more specific, complaint I have is I'm still absolutely losing my mind that the relationship between two of the characters was never even acknowledged as incest at any point by anyone, not aloud or even thought to themself that we were informed of at least (unless I somehow missed it?) But I was going crazy the whole time with 'OMG do they realize that just bc they didnt grow up together or even know one another existed until recently does NOT make their dna any less related. Do they even realize theyre cousins???? Does ANYONE realize theyre cousins????? Is anyone going to acknowledge this or did the author actually just somehow not realize these two characters technically are family, blood family, first cousins in fact!!!'
But overall Id absolutely recommend this book to anyone else who enjoys character driven stories about very flawed characters, and more specifically very flawed characters who are struggling with turmoil stemming from mental health/addiction issues (a personal favorite kind of character to read about for me!)

fhina's review against another edition

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4.0

Auf das Buch aufmerksam geworden bin ich durch Lina Mallon. Sie hatte es auf Instagram in ihren Stories gezeigt und so ist es auf meine "Muss ich mir mal genauer anschauen" - Liste gewandert. Danach bin ich mehrere Male im Buchladen um das Buch herum geschlichen, bevor ich es dann doch irgendwann mitgenommen habe.


Der Gin Trailer ist die Geschichte von zwei Frauen, welche beide nicht in der Lage sind, sich gegenseitig selbst zu retten. Erzählt wird die Story entweder aus Stellas oder Tillys Sicht.

Wir lernen Stella kennen, welche sich um ihre sterbende Großmutter Lucy kümmert. Mit ihrem Leben in New York ist sie alles andere als zufrieden. Sie arbeitet als persönliche Assistentin für eine Tyrannin und hat eine Affäre mit einem verheirateten Mann, welchem sie egal ist, er ihr aber nicht. Nach und nach erfährt man ein paar Details aus Stellas Kindheit und das zerrüttete Verhältnis zu ihrer Mutter Dora, welche eine Anwältin für Einwanderungsrecht ist. Die Probleme mit ihrer Mutter und die schwierige Kindheit haben Stella in die Magersucht getrieben, weil ihr dies das Gefühl von Kontrolle über sich selbst gegeben hat. Auch wenn Stella die Magersucht nun besiegt hat, merkt man an der Art und Weise, wie sie über die Jahre, in denen sie gehungert hat, spricht, dass ein gewisser Stolz involviert ist.

Als es Lucy immer schlechter geht, fragt sie nach Matilda und Stella erfährt so, dass Sie eine Tante hat. Nachdem Lucy gestorben ist, entscheidet Stella, sich auf die Suche nach Tilly zu machen und ihr die Nachricht vom Tod der Mutter zu überbringen.

Tillys Story ist noch schmerzvoller als Stellas und reicht von Alkoholismus, Misshandlung bis hin zu Prostitution. Ihre Geschichte ist so schmerzhaft, dass man diesen fast am eigenen Körper spürt. Auch ihr Verhältnis zu ihrer Mutter war zerrüttet. Nach einem ersten, vorsichtigen Kennenlernen entscheiden sich Stella und Tilly, das jeweils alte Leben zurückzulassen und gemeinsam ein neues Leben mit der Hilfe von Tilly Sohn Abe zu beginnen.

Der Gintrailer ist eine Geschichte, deren Plot sich nur zwischen Stella und Tilly abspielt und nur wenig Spielraum für andere Charaktere lässt. Das ist natürlich keinesfalls schlecht, denn die Autorin gibt dem Leser genug Stoff zum Nachdenken. Zum einen wären da die kühlen Mutter-Tochter-Verhältnisse, die Art und Weise, wie die Frauen selbst zu sich und ihrem Körper stehen und was sie diesem antun mit Magersucht, Alkohol, Drogen und Prostitution und natürlich die schlechten Verhältnisse zu Männern. All das trägt zu dem Schmerz, welchen die Frauen erfahren, bei. Durch die abwechselnden Kapitel haben die Leser die Möglichkeit, Ereignisse mit den Augen beider Charaktere zu sehen, und führen einen vor Augen, wie man sich selbst wahrnimmt und wie andere einen sehen.

Das Buch ist wirklich traurig und man muss mehr als einmal schlucken und dennoch will man weiterlesen und wissen, wie die Geschichte weitergeht ... Vielleicht weil man Hoffnung auf eine Wendung des Plots hat.  Die Erzählweise ist eher gemächlich, aber nicht so, dass es sich in die Länge ziehen würde. Manchmal ist der Schreibstil etwas stockend, aber das hat mich nicht sonderlich gestört. Das Ende kommt das fast etwas überraschend und ich hatte mir etwas mehr als Auflösung gewünscht.

torriejaywhite's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0


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