The Red Car: A Novel
The Red Car: A Novel book cover

The Red Car: A Novel

Hardcover – October 11, 2016

Price
$24.95
Format
Hardcover
Pages
208
Publisher
Liveright
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1631492334
Dimensions
5.9 x 0.8 x 8.6 inches
Weight
10.4 ounces

Description

"Sharp and fiery…The novel’s furious action keeps the pages snapping by, but each incident, at times each sentence, is bubbling with equally furious ideas…There is, now, a literary term for a book you can’t stop reading that makes you stop to think. It is The Red Car ." ― Daniel Handler, The New York Times Book Review "A swift and magical read . . . . Spare, funny and deftly observant of what happens when our repressed emotions reach a violent precipice." ― Maddie Crum, Huffington Post "Pitch-perfect novel…Sprinkled with dark humor and many literary references, Dermansky’s novel is ultimately one of compassion, optimism, and fierce feminism, in which an unmoored young woman enmeshed in bad relationships with men resets her life path." ― Los Angeles Times " The Red Car is melancholy and introspective, but sharply witty and transgressive too, and it’s full of the intrepid gestures I so love in fiction, both by the characters and the writing itself. There’s a particular intellectual and emotional gratification to be found in this smart novel that so wonderfully blurs boundaries of reality, of past and present, of time and space. The Red Car is a remarkable book." ― Natalie Bakopoulos, San Francisco Chronicle "A dry, delightful fairy tale for grown-ups." ― People "If you want to fall in love with a book almost at first sight (i.e. paragraph four) . . . read Marcy Dermansky’s The Red Car ." ― Elle "Dermansky’s writing is taut and smart. And it’s a thrill to cheer on Leah, that admirable badass, wherever the red car takes her next." ― Amy Brady, Chicago Review of Books "I've been waiting and waiting for a new book from Marcy Dermansky and finally that new book is here. The Red Car is taut and smart and strange and sweet and perfect. I want to eat this book or sew it to my skin or something." ― Roxane Gay, author of The Untamed State and Bad Feminist "Marcy Dermansky’s The Red Car is a wonder. Moving, mysterious and filled with dark, sly humor, it rustles under your skin and stays there. By the time I reached its shimmering final pages, I wanted to go right back to the beginning and start again." ― Megan Abbott, author of You Will Know Me "There are few writers who can do what Marcy Dermansky does so effortlessly in The Red Car , the way she pushes this story in such surprising and thrilling directions, never losing control, taking your breath away line by beautiful line. Dermansky writes with such unnerving clarity about grief, not just for the loss of a loved one, but for our own unexpected lives. A strange, unflinching, utterly amazing novel." ― Kevin Wilson, author of The Family Fang "A new book by the inimitable Marcy Dermansky is worth cheering for. The Red Car is droll, unflinching, and mysterious, a feat of efficient storytelling. I could not put it down. This novel mesmerized me." ― Edan Lepucki, author of California "I’ve long admired the work of Marcy Dermansky, and her latest is an absolute stunner. The Red Car is the very rare kind of novel that―with its urgency and intrigue and deep intelligence―will pin you to your chair and transport you utterly. Stop what you’re doing and read this book." ― Laura van den Berg, author of Find Me "Don’t be fooled by The Red Car’s brevity: it packs a serious punch. Dermansky’s vision is sharp and clear, pushing her beautifully realized protagonist, Leah, into the rapids on a journey of self-discovery. And we’re right there at her side, breathless, as she shakes herself awake. A tremendously moving story that feels true and important." ― Cari Luna, author of The Revolution of Every Day "In vivid, dreamlike prose. . . . Dermansky delivers a captivating novel about the pursuit of joy that combines dreamlike logic with dark humor, wry observation, and gritty feminism." ― Kirkus (Starred Review) "Sleek and polished . . . . Dermansky's short, punchy chapters keep the tightly written novel moving smoothly along, and flashbacks to her past add depth without slowing momentum." ― Publishers Weekly "[Dermansky’s] latest explores the many unwise decisions of her heroine, offering no solutions but encouraging us to hope that things will get better. Readers won’t be able to put this one down." ― Andrea Kempf, Library Journal "Dry, entertaining and crookedly insightful. . . . [The Red Car] is on one level, a fairy tale complete with fairy godmother, and on another, a whispered goad to the reader: Live the life you really want." ― Marion Winik, Newsday "With the release of her incandescent third novel The Red Car , she’s poised to ride the current wave of fascination with these anti-heroines." ― Doree Shafrir, Buzzfeed Marcy Dermansky is the author of the novels The Red Car , Bad Marie , and Twins . Her writing has appeared in McSweeney’s , Salon , the Indiana Review , and elsewhere. She lives in New Jersey with her daughter.

Features & Highlights

  • A wildly imaginative, rebellious, and tender tale of independence from the critically acclaimed author of
  • Bad Marie
  • .
  • With each new novel, Marcy Dermansky deploys her "brainy, emotionally sophisticated" (
  • New York Times
  • ) prose to greater and greater heights, and
  • The Red Car
  • is no exception.
  • Leah is living in Queens with a possessive husband she doesn’t love and a long list of unfulfilled ambitions, when she’s jolted from a thick ennui by a call from the past. Her beloved former boss and friend, Judy, has died in a car accident and left Leah her most prized possession and, as it turns out, the instrument of Judy’s death: a red sports car.
  • Judy was the mentor Leah never expected. She encouraged Leah’s dreams, analyzed her love life, and eased her into adulthood over long lunches away from the office. Facing the jarring disconnect between the life she expected and the one she is now actually living, Leah takes off for San Francisco to claim Judy’s car. In sprawling days defined by sex, sorrow, and unexpected delight, Leah revisits past lives and loves in search of a self she abandoned long ago. Piercing through Leah’s surreal haze is the enigmatic voice of Judy, as sharp as ever, providing wry commentary on Leah’s every move.
  • Following her "irresistible" (
  • Time
  • ) and "wicked" (
  • Slate
  • ) novel
  • Bad Marie
  • , Dermansky evokes yet another edgy, capricious, and beautifully haunting heroine―one whose search for realization is as wonderfully unpredictable and hypnotic as the twists and turns of the Pacific Coast Highway. Tautly wound, transgressive, and mordantly funny,
  • The Red Car
  • is an incisive exploration of one woman’s unusual route to self-discovery.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(158)
★★★★
20%
(105)
★★★
15%
(79)
★★
7%
(37)
28%
(148)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Fantastic and unsettling

This book grabbed me from the first page, and never let go. The events, though almost mundane on their face, take on a mythical quality in Dermansky's hands; she has the ability to make plain, clear utterances more than the sum of their parts, and run a shiver of electricity underneath her story, only occasionally letting it spark up into view. If that doesn't sound good, it is. It is very, very good.
11 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Lovely engrossing book

My husband bought this for me as a gift after hearing the author interviewed on NPR. He was spot on with this gift... I was so engrossed that I read it in two sittings (which is saying a lot since I don't have a lot of free time with two young children). The writing is superb and the story subtle but engaging. I was so surprised to see all the negative reviews on amazon. The idea of reckoning with your younger self and all of your dreams and influences is universal.
9 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Bottom Line: Plot Matters

In any novel, it's nice if there is a POINT to the story...something learned, something decided, something resolved. On an even more basic level, it's nice if something important actually HAPPENS. The reader searches in vain here. We don't find out the reason for or significance of ... anything, really. Not the protagonist's mercurial choices, not her sexual adventures, not her old boss's ostensible suicide, not the motivations or evolutions of the oddball assortment of old friends she reconnects with, and certainly not the origins of the homicidal car or its supernatural properties. You're hoping that at least her reunion with Jonathan Beene will be the key to something, but that also turns into a meaning-free anti-climax. Ms. Dermansky does master a unique voice for Leah; the character's quirky thought processes and cadences make for an interesting rhythm in the writing, at least in the early going. But eventually all that stream of consciousness gets annoying. Gosh, was I ready for this thing to be over.

Also, as one other reviewer has noted...I think for my money I deserve at least a competently proofread text. Many missing words, sentences that just seem to stop in the middle...it's kind of shocking, really, that so many of these kinds of things can fall through the cracks in the production of commercial fiction, in both bound and ebook versions.
9 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

What a Ride!

The Red Car is a novel you want to read again right after you've finished it. It's a road trip, a treatise on the dangers of marriage (especially for women), a book about the search for self. And it moves like lightening, buoyed by the writer's stripped clean sentences and wit. It's one-of-a-kind, adventurous and bold and surprisingly lovely.
9 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

highly recommend an engrossing read

Wonderful, quirky and deep.
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Amazing

The Red Car was totally not what I expected. Honestly, the publisher blurb makes it sound like a borderline Eat Pray Love journey of self discovery featuring a constant soundtrack of Natasha Bedingfield. Luckily for us, that is SO not what this book is. It is much weirder than that. If you like the straight forward, quirky, honest sense of humor of Miranda July and/or the sparse, powerful writing of Lydia Davis, this is the book for you. And that's exactly why it was the book for me.

I don't want to say much about the plot. Leah had a boss who she had a close bond with, then Leah moved away. Her boss, Judy, wanted her to succeed. Leah ends up married to an awful guy who seems benign and she is mostly complacent. She hadn't spoken to Judy in years, and one day she is shocked to find out that Judy is dead. And Judy left her the red car that she loved and that Leah hated (also the car that Judy died in), in addition to something else. A thing happens that makes Leah 100% decide to fly to San Francisco by herself. And then some weird stuff goes down. I WISH I could say more, but I can't. Just know that it is a tightly written story and a quick, enjoyable read. I laughed a lot, I also cried. It's dark. And, again, it's WEIRD. There were some sexy times in the book which is normally horrifying for me (I'm not a prude at all, but sex scenes make me blush too much), but it was done perfectly and never felt gratuitous.

The writing is the best part of this book, and I don't mean that in a bad way like as if other things were lacking. I mean that it was well written on all fronts. Real emotion and thought was evoked. Intelligent, contemporary, and completely on point. I need to read every other word Marcy Dermansky has ever written.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A Jack Kerouac for the 21st century!

Marcy Dermansky's novels have always been razor sharp, insightful, and hilarious - but she reaches a new high with THE RED CAR. Her heroine, Leah, is a Jack Kerouac for the 21st century - a restless, impulsive woman seeking to break out of an unsatisfying life in ways that always surprise and then, upon reflection, the reader thinks "Well, yeah. Of course." THIS version of San Francisco - murky and strange, with the rose-colored glasses tossed on the floor and smashed - is both alarmingly accurate and surprisingly fantastical. Dermansky's writing is compelling as much for what she chooses to leave out of her prose as to what she gives us - forcing the reader deeper and deeper into what, at first, might feel like an "other" heroine. Instead, like the writing itself, I found myself inspired by Leah's brave attempts at bettering and understanding her life, breathless at the turns this juicy novel took, and dazzled by how invested I found myself in this very unique heroine. I already miss hanging out with her. This book is a great travel novel and ideal for book clubs - it's lean and mean, but will yield a fascinating conversation about being female, the power of grief, and what freedom really feels and tastes like today.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

This perhaps is Marcy's best work to date

Macy has a unique voice quirky voice that makes reading anything she writes a pleasure. I have one complaint about this book, as well as Marcy's others - they are almost impossible to put down once you start reading them- so be prepared to read in one or two sittings. I knew when i received my copy, the work i was doing was going to have to wait. This perhaps is Marcy's best work to date. I can't wait to see the movie! Not sure who will make it yet but this narrative screams for a cinematic take. Disclosure- Marcy is my sister. But for anyone who knows me that doesn't mean i'd give her book 5 stars if I didn't believe it merited them. Marcy leaves readers of her books waiting for her next one. I know i am! . The writer Daniel Handler reviewed Marcy's book in the NYTimes on Sunday- "There should be a literary term for a book you can’t stop reading that also makes you stop to think. " He concluded that term should be 'the red car." I agree. Here is a link to his review- (cut and paste to read it isn't hot linked).. ‘The Red Car’: A Novel of Furious Action and Furious Ideas [...]
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Briilliant!!

I loved this book & couldn't put it down! Instant classic!!
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great read

I love this author, you never know where she might take you
3 people found this helpful