Submitted by StardustAtSea t3_10tf46p in books
I just finished My Absolute Darling and I am broken. The moment I finished the first chapter I had this feeling in my gut that it would have me crying by the last page, and it did, but also cause it struck a real core with me, brought back memories from when I was just hitting puberty and doing shitty in school. I didn't even come close to a fraction of the hurt the main character goes through in this book in my actual life, but still I could emphitazies and relate to her so deeply. She is so well rounded in the way's she come up with excuses for her father as to why he does what he does and hurts her the way he does. Some people have said that the rape scene between her and her father is terrible because it's described in an almost romantic way but reading it I never felt that, it was written through her eyes and the way she sees her father is as this big hulking man whos small glimses of love outshines all the evil in him. In a part later after he helps soap in her hair she walks up to her room almost high with the "love" she feels for him. It's grooming, it's Stockholm syndrom, it's a girl who desperatelt wants love from her father, and like many victims who grows up in such an environment they don't always see how it's wrong. Some people have said that she is overly sexulazied, and I really have a hard time thinking of a single moment where that statement could be justified, because I don't think she is. The book is great in the way that it dosen't talk to you like you're stupid and tells you want to think, it's all through her eyes and we witness her journey of discovery through HER eyes. What you know and what you think about life is totally irrelevant to this girl who is simpley not there yet. Just because what you reads disgusts you dosen't mean that the writer is a dirtback for writing it, if you ask me he got the reaction out of you that he wanted. Like I read this right after Blood Meridian so my stomach had gotten used to depravity.
All the dialogue between her and her father is so realistic and tragic. The way we are put right in the conversation and can see the moments he changes from calm to fucking evil is masterful. I do think Brett and Jacob were way too over the top in the way they spoke. Much of the dialogue I thought was realistic in the way that good friends have their own lanuage and banter, even reminding me of how me and my brother talks, but when talking to Turtle I don't understand why they kept it up, like they were totatlly blind to her not at all being a part of their jokes. Their relationship also never really develops to a point where you think "okay, bim bam boom LOVE!" But I guess they don't have too, the plot of the book is her finding out there's more to life then her little house on the hill, and Jacob, Cayenne, Anna and others are the small epiphanies that wakes her up to the idear that she has to get out!
I love it, I cried over my life and her life. It does what a good book does, stabs you in the fucking heart, and gives you enough hope to say "Turtle, not today and not tomorrow but she's gonna be alright someday"
TLDR Great, great, great book. Sad, made me cry
Cleverusername531 t1_j76sqi9 wrote
Wow, wow. I’ve avoided this one for a while due to the subject matter but you’re making me think this could break open the grief for me that I cannot seem to let out.