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Gun Love

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**Longlisted for the National Book Award for Fiction 2018**

'Haunting ... poetic ... Full of sorrow and aching sweetness' Washington Post

Gun Love is a hypnotic story of family, community and violence. Told from the perspective of a sharp-eyed teenager, it exposes America's love affair with firearms and its painful consequences.

'My mother called anyone or anything that seemed alone, or ended up in the wrong place, a stray. There were stray people, stray dogs, stray bullets, and stray butterflies.'

Fourteen-year-old Pearl France lives in the front seat of a broken down car and her mother Margot lives in the back. Together they survive on a diet of powdered milk and bug spray, love songs and stolen cigarettes.

Life on the edge of a Florida trailer park is strange enough, but when Pastor Rex's 'Guns for God' programme brings Eli Redmond to town Pearl's world is upended. Eli pays regular visits to Margot in the back seat, forcing Pearl to find a world beyond the car. Margot is given a gift by Eli, a gun of her own, just like he's given her flowers. It sits under the driver's seat, a dark presence...

'One of those rare books that the reader might wish to be a few dozen pages longer, to spend more time in this fully realised world ' Observer

*Soon to be a film adaptation directed by Julie Taymor*

243 pages, Hardcover

First published March 6, 2018

252 people are currently reading
6069 people want to read

About the author

Jennifer Clement

27 books511 followers
Jennifer Clement is President Emerita of the human rights and freedom of expression organization PEN International and the only woman to hold the office of President (2015-2021) since the organization was founded in 1921. Under her leadership, the groundbreaking PEN International Women’s Manifesto and The Democracy of the Imagination Manifesto were created. As President of PEN Mexico (2009-2012), Clement was instrumental in changing the law to make the crime of killing a journalist a federal crime.

Clement is author of the novels A True Story Based on Lies, The Poison That Fascinates, Prayers for the Stolen, Gun Love and Stormy People as well as several poetry books including Poems and Errors, published by Kaunitz-Olsson in Sweden. Clement also wrote the acclaimed memoir Widow Basquiat on New York City in the early 1980’s and the painter Jean-Michel Basquiat, which NPR named best book of 2015 in seven different categories. Her memoir The Promised Party will be published in early 2024. Clement’s books have been translated into 38 languages and have covered topics such as the stealing of little girls in Mexico, the effects of gun violence and trafficking of guns into Mexico and Central America as well as writing about her life in the art worlds of Mexico and New York.



Clement is the recipient of Guggenheim, NEA, MacDowell and Santa Maddalena Fellowships and her books have twice been a New York Times Editor’s Choice Book. Prayers for the Stolen was the recipient of the Grand Prix des Lectrices Lyceenes de ELLE(sponsored by ELLE Magazine, the French Ministry of Education and the Maison des écrivains et de la littérature) and a New Statesman Book of the Year, picked by the Nobel Laureate Kazuo Ishiguro. Gun Love was an Oprah Book Club Selection as well as being a National Book Award and Aspen Words Literary Prize finalist. Time magazine, among other publications, named it one of the top 10 books of 2018. At NYU she was the commencement speaker for the Gallatin graduates of 2017 and she gave the Lectio Magistralis in Florence, Italy for the Premio Gregor von Rezzori. Clement is a member of Mexico’s prestigious Sistema Nacional de Creadores de Arte.



For Clement’s work in human rights, she was awarded the HIP Award for contribution to Latino Communities by the Hispanics in Philanthropy (HIP) Organization as well as being the recipient of the Sara Curry Humanitarian Award. Most recently, she was given the 2023 Freedom of Expression Honorary title on the occasion of World Press Day by Brussels University Alliance VUB and ULB in partnership with the European Commission, European Endowment for Democracy and UNESCO among others. Other laureates include Svetlana Alexievich, Zhang Zhan, Ahmet Altan, Daphne Caruana Galizia and Raif Badawi, among others.



Jennifer Clement was raised in Mexico where she lives. She and her sister Barbara Sibley founded and direct the San Miguel Poetry Week. Clement has a double major in anthropology and English Literature from New York University (Gallatin) and an MFA from University of Southern Maine (Stonecoast). She was named a Distinguished Alumna by the Kingswood Cranbrook School.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 738 reviews
Profile Image for Shelby *trains flying monkeys*.
1,748 reviews6,569 followers
February 6, 2018
Pearl has grown up living in a car that is parked at the beginning of a middle of nowhere Florida trailer park. She doesn't know much of anything about her mother's past life other than the fact that she knows her mom came from money..(and fly swatters and the gas stove) and that no one knows that Pearl exists. She has no birth certificate as her mom had her and ran. That keeps the child protection services away. Or so she hopes.

Pearl and her mom have lived in that car Pearl's whole life. They have made it and the trailer park their home. They take showers at the community restroom and eat things that don't need refrigeration. They have neighbors that look out after them.


You don't want to miss these characters...a mentally challenged woman with her Barbie dolls, a traumatized Vet, an Hispanic couple and the preacher. *yes please*

Pearl even has a best friend that she steals cigarettes for and they go to the dump and look for dead animals. Good times.

Then Eli comes to the trailer park.


Pearl's mother becomes a different type of woman with Eli and starts making Pearl leave the car when he is around and stops going to work.

This frigging author can write her butt off. I swear I actually tasted the Raid spray that Pearl's mother would spray down the car with nightly. She brings all these characters to life in your head and then when the bad stuff goes on..and you sorta knew bad stuff couldn't help but happen...you saw it through Pearl's voice and eyes. It sorta dimmed down the bad but in a way that still socked me over the head. I've not read anything quite like that experience. I would have given this the full five stars except for a few things...and I have been hating every dang book I read lately. So that's saying something. (Probably something stupid...but still)

Booksource: Netgalley in exchange for review.

Profile Image for Diane S ☔.
4,901 reviews14.6k followers
March 20, 2018
3.5 In her novel, Prayers for the Stolen, Clement showed us, forgettably, how tragically are the lives of those who live with the daily threat of drug cartels. In this one, she tackles the subjects of homelessness, poverty and the prevalence of guns in our society. Pearl, our narrator is 14, she and her mother have spent her life in a car, situated at the entrance of a trailer park. Yet, her mother who comes from a priviledged background, one she has run away from, makes their situation almost magical. There is a preacher who is said to be collecting guns, taking them from people, supposed to be destroying them. When a new man enters the picture, Pearls mother is head over heels in love, and Pearls life changes. When a tragedy occurs, Pearl must find a way to move on from the past.

The writing is gorgeous. When you take young children places, the places shown through their eyes takes on new meanings, as if we, the adults were seeing them for the first time. Clement does the same with her writing, her phrases, a magical quality to her writing that left an indelible mark on this reader. The story is a simple one, but her use of langage makes it anything but. We are in fact reading the story with new eyes. The ending gave me somewhat of a pause, not sure if I liked it, but I guess with everything that came before it was fitting.

"Since she could see under the wind and husk; my mother was always
getting mixed up, stirred up with a spoon, shaken like a milkshake
With the wrong people all the time."

"But sweetness is always looking for Mr. Bad and Mr. Bad can pick
Out Miss Sweet in any crowd - just like magnets. Mr. Bad was the
Refrigerator and Miss Sweet was the Florida loves Oranges magnet
sticking to the door."

A heartfelt story and a timely one.

ARC from Edelweiss.
Profile Image for Kelly (and the Book Boar).
2,819 reviews9,511 followers
April 14, 2018
Find all of my reviews at: http://52bookminimum.blogspot.com/

FLOAT.

Now if you know me you know I hardly ever float a review, even for release date. I'm making an exception here and my apologies for being out of town when the actual release happened earlier this week. Not only was this book a real genre bender that could be classified as any or all of contemporary, young adult, chick lit or grit lit - but it was just different in general. I won't forget Pearl or her mother or their car near the trailer park anytime soon and since I have Old Lady Brain that's a flippin' miracle all on its own.

I was lucky enough to score an ARC of this before anyone except Shelby was peeing their pants over it. I was doubly lucky to score a hard copy from a place called Blogging for Books that just shut their doors after a good run of offering freebies to anyone who wanted to review them. I wanted to take a second to say thanks to the various websites and authors and publishers who provide reader copies to us little guys. I don't expect my reviews help sell many additional copies of books, so it's a real honor to be able to read stuff before everyone else. Especially real quirky stuff like Gun Love that might just find its target audience amongst my friend list.

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ORIGINAL REVIEW:

4.5 Stars

Current situation:



Except, you know, it’s the death flu this time. Lucky for me I’m already dead inside so it wasn’t able to murder me. I did want to take a time-out from my hacking my right lung out in order to put something up about this in case it is still available for request. If you’re like me, you try your darndest to steer clear of NetGalley because you already fear you will soon be appearing on A&E when your family stages an intervention for your addiction. It’s then you rely on people like My Better Half to tell you about not-to-miss items. In this case, she didn’t even get a chance to read the thing because I wanted it from the title alone. Not to mention the synopsis told me it was going to be about a girl who not only straight up lives in a car, but that said car is NEXT TO A TRAILER PARK(!!!!), in the great state of Florida . . . .



Where the local man of the cloth preaches on Sundays and runs guns the rest of the days of the week. I pretty much looked like this before I even started . . . .



By the time I was finished I was like . . . .



Sorry, too much Olympic viewing the past few days.

I don’t really know what to say about this story. You’re dropped in on Pearl’s life for little more than a moment and yanked right back out again. There’s not much “before” to learn about and there’s certainly no epilogue detailing the after. The story is very much in the now and the viewpoint is completely Pearl’s. Gun Love earns its Stars for the same reason many will subtract them – the writing. You’re either going to love it or hate it and obviously I fall into the former category.

ARC provided by NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Thank you, NetGalley!
Profile Image for Meike.
Author 1 book4,943 followers
August 24, 2019
Nominated for the National Book Award 2018
This is a book about the apocalypse and about contemporary America - kudos to the NBA, because looking at the latest Booker longlist, there are zero nominees that come even close to dissecting post-Brexit Britain as fearlessly and presciently. This novel daringly tackles problems specific to the United States, and there is strength in confronting inconvenient truths, especially when done so poetically and intelligently.

Our protagonist, 14-year-old Pearl, and her mother Margot live in a car that is standing in a trailer park in Florida. Margot gave birth to Pearl when she was only 16 and consequently fled her affluent, but cruel father. Many of the other inhabitants of the trailer park are also average people who fell on hard times: There are Mexican immigrants, a former teacher with a disabled daughter who lost everything after her now deceased husband fell ill and she had to pay high medical bills, and a one-legged veteran with his family, all of them now stranded on a piece of land close to a dump, next to a polluted river that produces baby conjoined twin alligators and a skink with twelve legs. When the dubious local pastor allows a young man named Eli to live with him, announcing to help out an old friend, Margot falls in love with Eli, unassuming of what this might mean for her and Pearl...

As the title suggests, guns are everywhere, and they have assumed almost spiritual powers: While everything we associate with life - people, animals, nature - dies, the guns seem to have eternal lives, they are elevated from objects to actors, as their pure presence influences the outcome of situations. Pearl senses the presence of Native American spirits, she constantly hears the songs her music-loving mother taught her, and she feels how the guns radiate the lives they have taken and that they will take. Although the people are dominated by the gun culture, they love their guns: A mutilated veteran, his own body destroyed by weapons, still enjoys unnecessarily shooting an animal, and men spend time "killing the river" (shooting at the riverbed) and even shooting at the sky, "shooting angels". Kids grow up with Gun Coloring Books, and when they become orphans because their parents got shot, they are referred to as "shoots". Guns are an economic factor, and people's idols don't give them hope anymore - they have been shot.

Another important theme is poison: People pollute the environment, they drink, eat and breathe in poison, and they emanate poison through toxic behavior. It is interesting to note that animal cadavers (and probably also human corpses) are scattered over the dump where kids play, and where the dead become poisonous for the living. I love how masterfully Clement plays with these themes throughout her story. The whole atmosphere she evokes, everything told through the eyes of Pearl, is menacing, bleak and mesmerizing - I could not put this book down.

Instead of chasing the American Dream, Margot advises Pearl to flee by dreaming herself away - is this today's America? This book is highly topical, but also very poetic and full of ingenious metaphors. A very powerful novel, and a very worthy contestant for the NBA.
Profile Image for Sara.
211 reviews154 followers
June 10, 2019
First part of the book is superstrong but near the end went it from 4 stars to 3 stars because of how boring it went , but I thought the ending was well done , I enjoyed it but didn't love.
Profile Image for Theresa.
248 reviews180 followers
November 22, 2018
"Gun Love" by Jennifer Clement could've been something great if it weren't for the pretentious writing. I had a hard time connecting with any of the characters because it seemed the author was more interested in writing bloated, poetry-like metaphors. I needed more plot and character development. I wanted to like the protagonist, Pearl, but she didn't seem like much of a person. She felt like a painting. Just kind of there. I absolutely hated Pearl's mother, Margot. I wanted to head-butt her so bad! Ugh. I couldn't figure out if she was suffering from mental illness, or if she was just a selfish, arrogant jerk? There were some emotional moments in this book, but for the most part, I found myself skimming most chapters. The last 50 pages were the strongest, but just when this baby started getting good, it ends abruptly. I had high hopes for this one. If you like character-driven novels then "Gun Love" might tickle your fancy. It's a mixed bag for me.

Thank you, Penguin Random House for the giveaway ARC. This book is scheduled to be released March 6, 2018.
Profile Image for سـارا.
294 reviews229 followers
September 15, 2022
قلم جنیفر کلمنت بی‌اندازه شیرینه. بدیهیات و اتفاقات روزمره رو اینقدر قشنگ توصیف میکنه و ازشون حرف میزنه که قند تو دلت آب میشه. میتونی بارها بخونیشون، تو ذهنت تکرارشون کنی و شیرینیش رو زیر زبونت حس کنی..
این کتابم مثل دعا برای ربوده‌شدگان خیلی دوست داشتم.
Profile Image for °•.Melina°•..
407 reviews611 followers
March 17, 2024
خوانش صوتی/ بدک نبود. انگار زیادی آمریکایی بود. اولش با خودت میگی عه چه ایده و فضای جالبی ولی بعدش دیگه اصلا هیچی برات باقی نمیذاره که جذب داستان بشی و بچسبی بهش. حالا خوبه آخرش یه اتفاق تقریبا بزرگ داشت اما بیشتر فقط دلم میخواست تا دراپش نکردم تمومش کنم و از اون کتاباییه که فقط چون صوتی بود تونستم تمومش کنم. البته یکم داره دلم میسوزه که اینطوری درموردش میگم (نویسنده توصیف ها و نگاه جالبی داشت) و در کل داستانش بخاطر غمی که داشت تو ذهنم خواهد موند اما خب میتونست بهتر از این دربیاره و شایدم فقط به سلیقه‌م نمیخورد.

~تو ریویوهای دیگه خلاصه‌ی اولشو به خوبی نوشتن من دیگه نمینویسم3>
Profile Image for Jill.
Author 2 books2,057 followers
January 18, 2018
A few years ago, I read Jennifer Clement’s Prayers for the Stolen, an electrifying book that has remained with me and has shaped my thinking of the brutality of the drug cartels and the urgency of compassion for the innocent victims who need to escape to safety. You can’t expect more from a book than that.

In Gun Love, Ms. Clement moves from drug culture to the pervasiveness of guns that are everywhere, keeping us all on the precipice between life and death. Whether it’s the casual buying and selling of these death weapons, the shooting of baby alligators for sport, or the violence that stalks us, it’s hard to break away from the allure of firearms.

Yet surprisingly, it is the “love” not the “gun” part of the book’s title that, I suspect, will remain with me. Jennifer Clement creates a unique protagonist in young Pearl, a 10-year-old albino (or near-albino) whose entire life has been spent living in a ’94 Mercury with her mother Margot. Margot escaped the trappings of wealth – and the abusiveness of her father – when she secretly gave birth to Pearl and has avoided detection ever since.

The description of their living arrangements, parked feet from a trailer park in a small down-and-out Florida town, comes alive as Pearl matter-of-factly considers her living arrangements. Take this for example: “When you live in a car there’s no surface for a vase of flowers. My mother would cut the stems short and arrange the flowers in an empty tin of powdered milk that she filled with water Then she placed the bouquet outside on the roof as if the roof were a mantelpiece.”

The trailer park and the denizens feel real and Pearl’s life is authentically portrayed. Anyone who has read her prior book already know her style fastidious attention to details, fully realized characters, inventive and often enchanting analogies, underscored by a strong message. Sometimes this message is overplayed but it is still a just message. From the first two lines, “My mother was a cup of sugar. You could borrow her anytime”, it’s evident that Jennifer Clement knows her craft.
Profile Image for Ron Charles.
1,165 reviews50.9k followers
March 26, 2018
Jennifer Clement, the president of PEN International, offers an entirely different experience in her haunting new novel, Gun Love . Its hushed poetic pages tell the story of a girl named Pearl who has lived her whole life with her mother in a broken-down car in a Florida trailer park. “Animal Kingdom and the Magic Kingdom were miles away,” Pearl says. “We were nowhere. . . . Life was always like shoes on the wrong foot.”

“Gun Love” draws a vision of poverty far from urban America; here, children interact with public education only sporadically, and their parents have little access to steady work or medical care. Pearl’s world, an enclave of subsistence living, is fenced in by . . . .

To read the rest of this review, go to The Washington Post:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/entert...
Profile Image for Ace.
453 reviews22 followers
October 30, 2018
I went through quite a range of emotions reading this book, which started out a little on the unbelievable side, the circumstances of the pregnancy for example, but anyway, I batted away the negativity and that led to a rewarding read. Personally, I don't like guns, I was waiting anxiously for the tragedy/s that I knew would happen. The setting at the tip, the toxic river, the grotty bus ride, living in a car, Guns for God, creepy guys at the trailer park and mutating aligators all kind of nulled the impact of the gunfire and it is probably indicative of the way we see our surroundings. If everything is so messed up, then how can one messed up thing be worse than the other?
Profile Image for Blair.
2,038 reviews5,858 followers
March 28, 2018
Gun Love is a poem, really, and once I understood that about it, I liked it a lot more. There's something of the modern fairytale about this story, in which 14-year-old Pearl and her mother Margot – who ran away from her wealthy family as a pregnant 16-year-old – live in a broken-down car on the edge of a Florida trailer park. The most effective and memorable scenes depict fragments of a scrappy existence made fuzzy by the dreamy, romantic haze of youth; Don't Kiss Me by way of The Night Rainbow. Pearl's narration is Clement's best achievement here – a charming medley of unsophisticated lyricism that somehow manages to be believable, too. (You can see how a girl raised on country ballads and her mother's sentimentality might learn to speak and think like this.)

Whenever the plot takes a more dramatic turn, its events seem to have a curious lack of impact. There's a climactic episode that divides the book in two, and I never really felt any sense of how it affected Pearl. The circumstances she finds herself in are so often lacking in the kind of detail that makes real life so difficult; she just carries on, drifting through it all in a daze like someone who's permanently, happily, stoned. There is a lot of tragedy and misfortune in Gun Love, but this is a story that concentrates more on language than emotion.

It makes more sense, to me, to see Gun Love as a make-believe story Pearl tells herself. Her own private myth, a way to spin a protective layer over the painful truth. A moonlit midnight wedding, a homeless family with a cache of priceless treasures, a miraculous rescue, murder without consequence: these are all the stuff of fantasies, even if some of them are darker fantasies than others.

I received an advance review copy of Gun Love from the publisher through NetGalley.

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Profile Image for Sara.
158 reviews54 followers
July 15, 2023
آغوش من همیشه برای اتفاق های غم انگیز بازه، اما با این کتاب نه! نشد حقیقتا، تمام تلاشم رو جهت دلسوزی سرنوشت شخصیت اول کتاب انجام دادم ولی نشد که بشه.
می‌خوام یه ایرادی بگیرم یه چیزی بگم که حسم به خوندنش شفاف‌تر بشه ولی کلمه‌ها از ذهن و دستم فرار می‌کنن.
پس مخلص کلام این‌که: به دلم ننشست!


پایان: بیست و چهارم تیرماه سال ۱۴۰۲
Profile Image for Michelle.
628 reviews230 followers
May 14, 2018
The desperation of poverty and homelessness combined with the sharp forces that shape gun culture define this powerful absorbing read: "Gun Love: A Novel" by Jennifer Clement. The story begins at Indian Waters Trailer Park, in an unnamed town near Sarasota, Florida. The story is narrated by Pearl France, who lives with her mother Margot, in their car. Margot supports them by working as a custodian at the local Veterans Hospital, and has raised her intelligent daughter to be resourceful and observant of her surroundings.

Pearl, born into homelessness, never had a birth certificate. "My life was 9 words long" she explained. Margot advised her daughter; "Don't worry about yourself--you'll never be found, because you've never been missing." Living in a run down trailer park, the only friend Pearl has ever had was April-May. The girls roamed and explored the dump and found a few treasures.
Alligators from a swamp nearby were worrisome, and gun shots were heard at all hours of the day and night. Pearl learned to read the signs, as her mother cautioned her to listen to the spirits of the ancient Indian's that came out at night and roamed the area. Margot lived in fear that Pearl would be removed from her care and placed in a foster home. Pearl never thought about her mother's mental stability or their lack of housing. Instead, the mother daughter pair remained vigilant and kept a low profile.

When Margot became involved with a new lover, Pearl needed to find somewhere else to do her homework. At an abandoned trailer she learned more about the hidden gun culture that began to shape her life. Pastor Ray's church sponsored a gun buy back program and Pearl was befriended by a Mexican-American woman, who literally took Pearl under her wing and kept very close tabs on her. We learn the reasons for this later in the book, as the storyline tragically turned in the senseless brutality of gun violence and murder. Pearl realized too, she needed to protect herself and hid a handgun amongst her belongings. Gun Love is a remarkable unforgettable story of intuition and survival. * With thanks to the Seattle Public Library.
Profile Image for Will.
277 reviews
October 5, 2018
2018 National Book Award Longlisted Novel

Jennifer Clement’s Gun Love takes aim (sorry) at two troubling issues in America, that of homelessness and, more specifically, of its gun culture. Her fourteen-year-old narrator, Pearl, has lived her entire life in a car parked at the edge of a small trailer park in Florida. The front seat of an old Mercury is her bedroom, the back seat belongs to her mother. The environment is grim. A toxic dump lies at the back of the trailer park and nearby is a polluted river, its bottom filled with the spent bullets from people shooting at unseen crocodiles. Clement does a wonderful job at creating a setting filled with despair and the sense of peril. She does an equally good job in her depictions of the down-on-their-luck residents of the trailer park. With its hint of the Southern Gothic, Clement presents a vivid portrait of an off-the-grid slice of America. There were plots twists that surprised me and others that were predictable, but the story is certainly one that is resonant for our current times.

If this all sounds overwhelmingly depressing, Clement gives Pearl a precocious voice, witty and sarcastic, containing enough dark humor to add balance to a foreboding story told against such a bleak background. Although I haven’t read it in other reviews, there were times I found the novel quite funny in that ‘black comedy’ way. This all brings me to Clement’s writing which is what truly bowled me over. Anyone who knows me well or have read other reviews by me knows that I am a great admirer of a spare prose style, one in which a few carefully chosen words are used to great effect. Clement is a master at crafting sentences that are short, polished gems, sentences that often stopped me dead in my tracks. I would read a line, read it again and think, ‘I should write this down, I should remember this.’ She has the rare ability to startle the reader with a few words - it may be a beautiful, lyrical description or something smart and quick used to comic effect. Most admirable is her amazing ability to capture the truth of the human spirit and the human condition in one short sentence.
Profile Image for Stitching Ghost.
1,483 reviews390 followers
July 26, 2023
Did I fully grasp what this book was trying to say? I have an inkling that I might not have. Did I enjoy my time with time with this novel and its beautiful prose? Absolutely. It was a thoroughly engaging if bleak read.
The imagery was pretty stunning and the characterization was on point.
Profile Image for ♥ Sandi ❣	.
1,637 reviews70 followers
April 10, 2018
3 stars Thanks to First to Read and Penguin Random House Books for a chance to read this ARC. Published in March 2018.

I understand that in this story the author was making a statement about guns and gun running between Mexico and the U.S., but I could not really follow her thought pattern. I felt that the story was a bit disjointed and not as fluid as I would have liked. It tended to go off on various tangents and then dropped them just as quickly.

I would try another book by Clement in hopes that I would like that story better or at least understand her writing methods.

This was not a book that I was totally absorbed in. I did not like any of the characters, however I could empathize with Pearl. Having moved a lot as a child I could understand the isolation in Pearls life. Living in a car, with a free living mother, was not the worst she would face in life.
Profile Image for Kathleen.
1,725 reviews113 followers
September 19, 2018
National Book Award for Fiction Longlist 2018. American-Mexican author Clement has a beautiful lyrical style that clashes jarringly with the substance of her gritty novel. Plus, she forces the reader to swallow some pretty big assumptions. First, how could Margot France birth a baby in her father’s house, on her own, without anyone knowing? How could she and her newborn baby girl, Pearl, live in a 1994 Mercury Topaz for fourteen years next to a seedy trailer park without the authorities intervening? And, I have to believe the smell of such living arrangements—in hot, humid Florida—would become unbearable. I don’t care if they did spray Raid every day—it had to be noxious.

So—setting all that aside—this is fundamentally a story about family and community. Margot is a sweet-natured woman who lives in her dreams and songs. She works as a cleaning woman at the Veterans Hospital, at least until she meets up with Eli Redmond. Margot falls in love with this dodgy character, quits her job, and sells all of her possessions for a fraction of their worth. Eli deals in guns. Pastor Rex lives in the trailer park next door and runs a ‘Give Your Guns to God’ campaign. He then works with Eli to sell them to a group of traffickers. Indeed, the trailer park is filled with guns and the inhabitants use them regularly—like shooting into the river to scare off (or kill) alligators. Men give women gifts of guns as signs of their affection.

Dreamy Margot walks straight towards Eli’s friend she named ‘Don’t Come Back’, even though he is pointing a gun straight at her. His ‘gun love’ shoots 20 bullets into her fragile body. Her death concludes the first part of the novel. In the next section, Pearl ends up in Child Protective Services before being rescued by another of the trailer park residents, Corizon. And before you know it, Pearl’s life is brushing up against those of the gun runners once again.

Clement provides a glimpse of the gun culture some marginal communities hold dear.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jerrie.
1,033 reviews162 followers
October 9, 2018
This NBA longlisted title covers many of the current social issues that the US is struggling with today - poverty, homelessness, drug addiction, the lack of adequate care for our veterans, and, of course, gun culture. I found the prose in this book wonderful with a great balance between the artistic and the practical. True-to-life characters who behave alternatively in selfish and unselfish ways are well-drawn and sympathetic.
Profile Image for Elina Mäntylammi.
714 reviews36 followers
May 13, 2020
Rakkaudesta aseisiin iski ilmat pihalle tällaiselta tasa-arvoisen yhteiskuntajärjestelmän sinisilmäiseltä kasvatilta. Jennifer Clement kirjoittaa kauniisti ja rajusti köyhyydestä ja syrjäytymisestä - ja aseista. Upeaa, yhteiskunnallista ja vaikuttavaa kaunokirjallisuutta.
Profile Image for Dave.
3,657 reviews450 followers
March 9, 2018
Gun Love is a beautifully written poetic story about a young girl who grew up in a Mercury, meaning that her bedroom was the front seat and mom had the rear seat and the trunk functioned as the pantry. Definitely had those Mercury Blues. It was not the best arrangement but when the teenage mom and her newborn nested there in the Mercury the few months turned into fourteen years.

It's told through Pearl's point of view, which is not just a young girl's voice - a girl who never left her trailer park for fourteen years, but has so many wonderful candy-coated phrases spit out. Not only was Pearl's mom a bit offbeat and maybe not quite right upstairs but the folks who planted themselves in the Park were just as offbeat and odd. From gun-collecting preachers to Barbie doll collecting women, to the Mexican woman who someday hopes to visit Selena's grave, it was a world of its own, set in Florida, but it's own state of mind. This book is incredibly successful at what it tries to do. Great work!

Thanks to Penguin Publishing for providing a copy for review.
Profile Image for Sepanta.
43 reviews9 followers
October 22, 2023
یه وقتی یه کتابی رو می‌خونی و اینجوری‌ای که من دارم توت می‌بینم تو فرصت معرکه بودن داری پتانسیلش رو داری لطفا ناامیدم نکن لطفا به خودت ظلم نکن ولی نهایتا همه چیز از دست میره. این کتاب هم اینجوری بود. اوایلش احساس می‌کردی داستان پتانسیل داره ولی ناگهان خیلی معمولی و ریاکارانه و خالی از ایده و خلاقیت میشه. معدود تصویرها و حرف‌های جالبی داشت اما انگار به زور چیده شده بودن انگار داستان نوشته شده بود فقط که اون تصویرها حتما توش گنجونده بشن. می‌فهمم نویسنده رو از این جهت ولی آخه چرا؟
Profile Image for Bernadette.
112 reviews66 followers
March 10, 2018
4.5 Stars, rounded up.

“My mother always said, Dreaming is cheap. It doesn’t cost a thing. In dreams you don’t have to pay the bills or pay the rent. In dreams you can buy a house and be loved back.” -Pearl.

Gun Love by Jennifer Clement is the story of a mother and daughter. Single mother Margot, is raising fourteen-year-old Pearl in a car in a Florida mobile home park. Pearl's “bedroom” is the front seat and Margot resides in the backseat . The old Mercury sits on land that borders a dump. Odors waft into the park where only four other families reside. Pearl and her mother have resided there since Margot ran from her wealthy family shortly after the secret birth of Pearl.

Clement’s characters are well drawn and complex. Mrs. Roberta Young lives with her grown daughter, developmentally delayed Noelle, who plants her Barbie Dolls like flowers around the trailer. Pearl has one friend, April May, but the girl’s father is an unhinged gun fanatic. Corazon, another resident of the park, has only one goal: to visit the grave of murdered Tejano singing star Selena. Pastor Rex is a minister who hosts such religious activities like the “Drive Thru Prayer” program and “Give Your Guns to God.” The pastor’s gun buy-back brings all kinds of people into the park. One of these people is Eli, and the pastor tells the congregation that Eli is a “fallen man.” Pearl is disheartened when her mother falls in love with Eli. Pearl knows that Eli is bad news from the start. Eli is just one of Margot’s poor decisions. She is naïve and too empathic for her own good; even allowing an unknown young homeless man to sleep in the car with her and her teenaged daughter. Her decisions will ultimately lead to tragedy. This sad novel is about the mother-daughter relationship, community, abandonment and gun culture in America. Ms. Clement is a gifted author whose prose is often lyrical.

On a personal note: I was offended by Ms. Clement’s portrayal of a Child Protective Services (CPS) worker in Gun Love. As a social worker, I’ve known many CPS and foster care workers. For the last eleven years, I have worked as a CPS worker, investigating child abuse and neglect. I’ve seen the tired, cliched characterizations of horrible CPS workers on television. Ms. Clement chooses to create a character that perpetuates the stereotype of the uncaring detached female as caseworker. Thanks for indulging my rant. It's important for people to know that Ms. Clement's character is in no way typical of an entire profession.
Profile Image for Chigozie Obioma.
Author 19 books1,474 followers
Read
August 26, 2022
I'm loving this book by my friend, Jennifer Clement. I will do a review later.
Profile Image for Rosita .
166 reviews35 followers
March 11, 2024
داستان مادری است که در نوجوانی باردار شده و بعد از زایمان برای رهایی از دست پدر سختگیرش از خونه فرار میکنه
نه پدر خودش و نه پدر دختر از وجود این بچه خبری ندارند و این مادر و فرزند در ماشین ، در یک پارکینگ نزدیک آشغالدونی زندگی می‌کنند. قصد مادر یک توقف کوتاه بود اما این توقف ۱۴سال طول می‌کشد.
به خودی خود ایده جالبیه. مخصوصا اینکه کل داستان از زبان دختر ۱۴ساله روایت می‌شود. دختری که بسیار جزئی‌نگر است و مادرش را عاشقانه و رویایی توصیف می‌کند اما به مرور زمان می‌فهمیم که مادر مشکلات روانی ناشی از تنفس مستمر گاز در کودکی دارد. با وجود تمام مشکلات، دختر، خودش رو خوشبخت میدونست، اما با پیدا شدن دوست پسر جدید مادر، یک قاچاقچی اسلحه، چالش‌ها بیشتر هم می‌شوند.

با اینکه ایده جالبیِ اما کل کتاب توصیف روزمرگی هستش. برای من شاعرانه اما کسالت بار بود.
Profile Image for Christina .
353 reviews40 followers
July 8, 2020
Das ging komplett an meinem Geschmack vorbei. Für mich fühlte es sich an, wie eine Aneinanderreihung von unbedingt gewolltem poetischen Schreibstil aber ohne Sinn. Da alle Protaginisten extrem einfach gestrickt waren, kam einfach nichts bei rum. Ich bin nahezu sprachlos, ob dieser befremdlichen Leseerfahrung.
Profile Image for Heather.
160 reviews
April 5, 2018
I just finished this and I am scratching my head. I closed the book and thought, "Uhhhh... huh?" This is a big fat NO for me. No. Just, no.
Profile Image for Erin.
514 reviews46 followers
September 23, 2018
At age 17, Margot flees from her affluent family with her newborn daughter and drives to Florida in her 1994 Mercury Topaz. Margot and her daughter whom she named Pearl, live in the Mercury in a trailer park near an odoriferous garbage dump until Pearl turns 14-years-old. Surprisingly under the circumstances, things go reasonably well for Margot and Pearl until Eli, a friend of Pastor Rex’s, the minister of the trailer park’s church, comes to town for a visit. Eli sets his sights on Margot. She invites him into the Mercury. And everything changes. Pearl is banished from the Mercury when Eli is there, which is all the time.

The first thing Pearl notices about Eli is his rifle. Suddenly, Pearl notices that guns are everywhere. Neighbors in the trailer park have them to shoot at alligators, to kill deer, and for protection.

Then Pearl’s life is permanently altered by a gun shot. She begins a journey that introduces her to others whose lives are unalterably changed by gun shots. The ending is stunning.

Clement never proselytizes about guns. She avoids the whole gun control debate. But you may find yourself picking a side after reading the book.

Clement’s writing is crisp and concise. I compared her sentences to a few from Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms and they’re similar. She doesn’t waste space with flowery paragraphs. Clement is wonderful with metaphors, similes, and descriptions. Here’s how she described Pearl’s love for a boy:

When I looked at Leo for the first time from my window I knew my arm was broken. I’d fallen down all the stairs. A train was coming down the tracks. And because I was so sad, I knew I loved him.


I’ll definitely be on the look out for Clement’s next book.
Profile Image for Julie.
Author 6 books2,302 followers
August 7, 2018
Pearl France and her mother, Margot, live in their car beside a trailer park in central Florida. They've lived there so long, the car is sinking into the vegetation. They dine off the few pieces of Limoges Margot took when she ran away from home at fourteen, pregnant with Pearl. Margot cleans at a nearby VA hospital and plays Mozart on the car dashboard; Pearl, tiny, with translucent skin and white hair, steals cigarettes from her neighbors and is fiercely protective of her dreamy, fragile mother.

They live on so many edges, these two castaways. The edge of poverty and homelessness, the edge of violence, where alligators snatch the unsuspecting in shallow water and pastors hustle guns on the side. When Margot meets the sly and sensual Eli Redmond, Pearl's tentative hold on stability is wrenched away.

Gun Love is a poetic ballad of mother-daughter love and loss. The steamy nowhere of Florida, Margot's riches-to-rags past, the collection of quirky, unsettling neighbors, and the sudden bursts of violence give the narrative a surreal, fairy-tale quality, in contrast to the very real obsession with guns and the aftermath of gun violence it portrays.

This is a short, sharp, unforgettable read. Pearl will pierce your heart with her plight and her wisdom. Clement's writing will take your breath away. Highly recommended.

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