小蓝视频

Skip to content

Book Review: Solitary writer ruminates on grief, love and writing during pandemic's first spring

The flood of pandemic literature shows no sign of letting up. In the three-plus years since the COVID-19 lockdown, we have seen fiction from the likes of Gary Shteyngart, Elizabeth Strout and many others.
20231106101128-654906b470f96da9b437d11bjpeg
This cover image released by Riverhead Books shows "The Vulnerables" by Sigrid Nunez. (Riverhead Books via AP)

The flood of pandemic literature shows no sign of letting up. In the three-plus years since the COVID-19 lockdown, we have seen fiction from the likes of Gary Shteyngart, Elizabeth Strout and many others. Now author of 鈥淪empre Susan: A Memoir of Susan Sontag鈥 and the National Book Award-winning 鈥淭he Friend,鈥 has written a pandemic novel called 鈥淭he Vulnerables.鈥

The title refers to the groups of people, including the elderly, considered at high risk of getting severely ill at the start of the pandemic in spring 2020. The unnamed narrator, a stand-in for the 72-year-old author, is among them.

In the publishing world 鈥淭he Vulnerables鈥 is classified as a novel but it more often reads like an elegant, funny essay about what it felt like to be stuck in New York City in the early days of the lockdown, when your wealthier friends fled to their country houses, leaving you alone with a bad case of writer鈥檚 block.

The narrator broods about the writing life even though she knows that 鈥渨henever I write something about writing or being a writer, I am annoying the hell out of some people.鈥 Indeed, self-awareness is a great part of her charm. 鈥淔or the writer,鈥 she muses, 鈥渙bsessive rumination is a must.鈥

About halfway through the book, Nunez stumbles on something like a plot: the narrator is asked to take care of a male parrot named Eureka for a couple stranded in California by the pandemic. The college student who had agreed to do it has fled the city, too, in a worrying display of Gen Z irresponsibility. Then he returns, in part because he missed the bird. 鈥淲e鈥檙e bros, he explained, to make me feel even more left out.鈥

Initially antagonistic, they slowly form a bond over edibles, vegan ice cream and microdoses of psilocybin. I briefly wondered whether Nunez was heading into 鈥淗arold and Maude鈥 territory, the 1971 movie about a troubled young man who falls in love with a much older woman.

But as a writer and academic thoroughly steeped in literary theory, Nunez knows that a conventional marriage plot is not an option in contemporary fiction, not 鈥渨ith the world on fire and its systems collapsing鈥 with hope after hope turning out to have been merely false hope.鈥 Plus, someone like her likely would have thought that he was not just too troubled but also too young. And so, their unlikely friendship becomes just one more oddball incident in this elegiac essay-novel.

___

AP book reviews:

Ann Levin, The Associated Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks