Discomfort of Evening
Discomfort of Evening book cover

Discomfort of Evening

Paperback – August 18, 2020

Price
$10.39
Format
Paperback
Pages
224
Publisher
Graywolf
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1644450345
Dimensions
5.67 x 0.88 x 8.25 inches
Weight
14.1 ounces

Description

“This is Rijneveld in short: an earthy and irreverent new voice, thrillingly uninhibited in style and subject matter. . . . The spaciousness of Rijneveld’s imagination comes as terror and solace. That lack of squeamishness, that frightening extremity, which, in Hutchison’s clean, calm translation, never feels showy or manipulative, gives full voice to the enormity of the children’s grief, their obscene deprivation.” ―Parul Sehgal, The New York Times “This childhood narrative of overwhelming grief, religious insanity, death and incest, cruelty and despair, is felt in the gut as much as it is in the heart. . . . The novel’s power resides not in its ability to stun, but rather in the compressed grace of the author’s plain style―lucidly conveyed by the translator Michele Hutchison―which conjures up a hermetically sealed reality and an adolescent protagonist so believable and unguarded that from the outset we feel her closeness and fear for her safety.” ― The Wall Street Journal “Impressive. . . . It is the strange, haunting observations through which the child, Jas, tries to make sense of the grown-up world that gives this novel of grief its particular power. A book to read―and to remember.” ― The Economist “The effects of the unspeakable grief felt by 10-year-old Jas’ family after the death of her beloved older brother are explored in painful and painstaking detail in this startling debut novel. . . . Rijneveld’s extraordinary narrator describes a small world of pain which is hard to look at and harder to ignore.” ― Kirkus Reviews , starred review “Rijneveld's International Booker Prize–shortlisted debut is not a novel for those expecting triumphal outcomes. Readers who can persist through the agonies of a family falling apart, however, will find their breath taken away by Rijneveld's prose as filtered through Hutchison's deft translation.“ ― Booklist , starred review “Rijneveld’s head-turning debut, a bestseller in their native Netherlands and a Booker International Prize nominee, puts a contemporary spin on classic wrath-of-God literature. . . . the translation’s soaring lyricism offers mercy for the reader.” ― Publishers Weekly “An intensely raw, memorable debut . . . . There is a bold beauty to the book, which for all its modernity seems to be set in a different age of automatic religious belief: the immensity and mystery of the universe coexisting alongside the claustrophobic community of farm, church and school. By using Jas’s everyday world as a metaphor for loneliness and fear, Rijneveld has created something exceptional.” ― Financial Times (UK)“The most talked-about debut novel of 2020 already. . . . Absolutely compelling. . . . Brutal and vivid.” ― Dazed (UK)“Translator Michele Hutchison deftly switches between registers and gives Jas a strong, unique voice . . . [with] poetic, mannered language, realistic bleakness and descent into surreal darkness.” ― The Guardian (UK)“Remarkable. . . . Confident in its brutality, yet contained rather than gratuitous, [ The Discomfort of Evening ] introduces readers to both a memorably off-key narrator and a notable new talent.” ― The Observer (UK)“Thanks to a fine translation by Michele Hutchison, English readers can experience the novel's heady imagery and sensory language . . . . A visceral portrait of a devout family dealing with grief and the result is both haunting and beautiful.” ― Monocle (UK)“The electricity in this book comes from the use of that blank narrative style to deliver a sort of Grand Guignol grotesquerie.” ― The Times (UK)“Rijneveld’s language renders the world anew, revealing the shocks and violence of early youth through the prism of a Dutch dairy farm. The strangeness of a child looking at the strangeness of the world.” ―International Booker Prize judges' citation “A moving yet unsentimental reflection on solitude in the face of loss, nature, authority―and oneself. Rijneveld’s gorgeous, almost tactile prose brings to life, with unforgiving precision, the fears and fantasies haunting a wrecked childhood. A relentless, delicately devastating novel.” ―Hernan Diaz “One of the best debut novels I have ever read. Shockingly good. Utterly unforgettable. . . . It’s a classic.” ―Max Porter “Rijneveld takes us into the bleak Dutch countryside, into a family's grief, and inside the mind of a girl who is in hiding from her own life. This beautiful, strange novel is filled with sentences that stopped me dead.” ―Chris Power Lucas Rijneveld grew up in a Reformed farming family in North Brabant before moving to Utrecht. He is the author of The Discomfort of Evening , which was the first Dutch book to win the International Booker Prize, as well as three poetry collections.

Features & Highlights

  • WINNER OF THE 2020 INTERNATIONAL BOOKER PRIZEA stark and gripping tale of childhood grief from one of the most exciting new voices in Dutch literature
  • Ten-year-old Jas lives with her strictly religious parents and her siblings on a dairy farm where waste and frivolity are akin to sin. Despite the dreary routine of their days, Jas has a unique way of experiencing her world: her face soft like cheese under her mother’s hands; the texture of green warts, like capers, on migrating toads in the village; the sound of “blush words” that aren’t in the Bible.One icy morning, the disciplined rhythm of her family’s life is ruptured by a tragic accident, and Jas is convinced she is to blame. As her parents’ suffering makes them increasingly distant, Jas and her siblings develop a curiosity about death that leads them into disturbing rituals and fantasies. Cocooned in her red winter coat, Jas dreams of “the other side” and of salvation, not knowing where this dreaming will finally lead her.A bestseller in the Netherlands, Lucas Rijneveld’s radical debut novel
  • The Discomfort of Evening
  • offers readers a rare vision of rural and religious life in the Netherlands. In it, he asks: In the absence of comfort and care, what can the mind of a child invent to protect itself? And what happens when that is not enough? With stunning psychological acuity and images of haunting, violent beauty, Rijneveld has created a captivating world of language unlike any other.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(995)
★★★★
20%
(664)
★★★
15%
(498)
★★
7%
(232)
28%
(929)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Boring Punctuated by Shock Scenes

“The Discomfort of Evening” by Dutch author Marieke Lucas Rijneveld, has got to be the most scatological novel ever to win the International Booker Prize. If an entire novel about poo (yes, I get it’s symbolic, thanks) is what you’re in the mood for, then this is the book for you.

And trust me, there are WAY WORSE scenes in the book than the poo obsession; disturbing and grotesque scenes of animal and human abuses. AND even then it’s mostly monotonous. I can only guess that it won the Booker for its shock value.
33 people found this helpful
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Masterfully Written, but Tough to Swallow

“The Discomfort of Evening” has a very dark premise: a young Dutch girl, angry at her older brother for excluding her, asks God to take him. The boy never returns from his solo ice skating trip, and we see everyone in this farming clan trying to process it. The subsequent days contain the uncertainty and confusion that you would expect from a 10-year-old narrator but with a much darker element to it.

It would help if you had a strong stomach to get through our narrator’s experimentation and premature exposure to very adult activities. She and her brother both had curious adventures with a teddy bear and a hamster. No one would fault an individual who could not handle hearing such tales about prepubescent youth. Still, you have to admire how author Marieke Lucas Rijneveld gives her protagonist an eloquent voice despite a juvenile love of toilet humor.

Breaking these social mores would cause most people to lose interest in the heroine, but we receive enough to know why Jas lacks the correct amount of guidance. She knew her bible verses but not enough to kiss her sister correctly. (Wow, was that part uncomfortable to read). You may develop a severe claustrophobia case when you see her parents’ loveless marriage and Jas’s lack of positive outlets from the toxic atmosphere.

No one will ever call the theme of religiously oppressive households new. Still, Rijneveld grew up in a Reformist farming family and may have added some unique autobiographical bits to their writing. We hope that some of the experimentation stories are from her imagination, but that will freak you out in a different way. If you treat animals as property, could you, in turn, lack respect for your own body?

Let me be clear: the author and translator both qualify as poetic wordsmiths and make sure that you care about Jas. However, most people do not want to hear about borderline incest and ten-year-old curiosity in today’s climate. You recognize the three kids as confused without guidance from their role models other than perverted Biblical messages. In a way, it makes the occasional sweet moments more rewarding.
17 people found this helpful
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Explicit Descriptions of Abuse

I preordered this book in anticipation of a spectacular read by an emerging new literary voice. While the author writes in a lyrical style, the content of their book is disturbing. Specifically, they normalize and explicitly describe sexual abuse of children. My copy is on its way back to the warehouse.
16 people found this helpful
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animal cruelty by author describing self as “they’

Thankfully I looked at reviews after the first description of startling animal cruelty. I am glad I will not have any more of this suffering in my head, I do not enjoy reading about terrifying and killing helpless creatures.
5 people found this helpful
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Disturbing

Warning: This novel contains animal abuse. I have returned my copy to Amazon.
3 people found this helpful
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Oh dear, what's happened to the Bookers? lol

Yes, it is dark, icky. That would be ok, if only there were some poetry, some beautiful sentences.
Not a fan. Now, it's on to the rest of the list to see what lost to This..
3 people found this helpful
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Not obscene or promoting child abuse, but an honest portrayal of disintegration from death.

My eldest was 3 when his younger brother died from SIDS. We managed in a healthy fashion, but many families don't. I think this book portrayed the slow disintegration of a family unable to deal with loss and grief. The children are left to manage emotions on their own as best they can with little to guide them. They do the best they can, not always in a healthy manner. Intermixed is innocent exploration of sexual identity, sex, that is overshadowed by the crushing grief, anger, and confusion that is felt. Kids can be remarkably cruel and these kids are, at times. However, in reading others reviews I see an imposition of a morality for the readers comfort that does not connect to the book. I was not bothered by parts because they fit. This is a remarkable book that I enjoyed very much. Thank you they.
2 people found this helpful
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Boring and Hard to Stomach

This was a total washout for me and I'm surprised I finished it.
1 people found this helpful
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A Family Falling Apart

Twelve year old Jas, one of four children in a devoutly religious Dutch farming family, lives a very structured life, but when her older brother dies suddenly that structure is instantly and irrevocably shattered. What follows is an unflinching portrait of a family falling apart. Jas watches helplessly as her parents grow distant and cold, her mother losing the will to live, her father edging toward brutality. On top
of this all three remaining children are at an age where they are beginning to discover their sexuality, the confusion of which becomes entangled with their grief and fear, to disastrous effect, especially in Jas’ remaining brother, Obbe. The Discomfort of Evening is a bruising, intentionally uncomfortable read, and all the more powerful for it.
1 people found this helpful
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Strange and dark

This is a deeply unsettling book. It is well written and I could not put it down. I would highly recommend.