Esme+a7 Charbonneau, a brilliant chemist and dreamer, takes refuge from reality by deconstructing the world around her into its chemical components, and although this habit contributes to her genius, it comes to threaten her marriage, livelihood, and sanity. 10,000 first printing. 12,500 ad/promo.
Carol Muske-Dukes (born in St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1945) is an American poet, novelist, essayist, critic, and professor, and the former poet laureate of California (2008–2011). Her most recent book of poetry, Sparrow (Random House, 2003), chronicling the love and loss of Muske-Dukes’ late husband, actor David Dukes, was a National Book Award finalist.
I’m interested to look into the chemistry theory that this book contains. What I remember suggests that everything was relatively accurate, scientifically, but I’m curious how someone with a deep knowledge of the subject would find it. Or maybe I’m selling the author short, and she herself has a strong chemistry background.
For some reason Ollie’s mannerisms seemed to match Edward from the original Cowboy Bebop. Not sure if that’s because they are similar characters, or have similar patterns of speaking, or I just thought of Edward early and couldn’t get her out of my head. A child referring to themselves mainly in the third person is something the two characters share, not sure if the rest of the connection is imagined though.
I liked Esme, but of course found some of her actions frustrating. Her storming onto the stage at the stand-up show was impossibly dumb. Navigating the school system of Los Angeles would be immeasurably frustrating for someone trying to raise a child like Ollie.
The ending was too abrupt, in my opinion, though lord knows there are enough stories about custody battles out there, so idk if continuing forward really makes sense either.
Still feel like divorce and infidelity are wildly over represented in popular fiction.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The author has quite a grasp on physics! There are many very detailed and technical passages about quarks and string theory and heterocity (sp?) and the protagonist's main interest, asymetric chiral molecules (she's a chemist). The story involves an odd girl who speaks in word salad but whose mom "gets" her and was like this as a child; a marriage between people who really *don't* get each other; reflections on the mentor relationship in grad school; and a portrait of the main character's emotional dissolution as she grapples with her big idea (Theory of Everything). Things do come right in the end, it seems. A good story, well told.