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The Book of Formation
The Book of Formation | Ross Simonini
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This debut novel--told in interviews--spans 20 years in the rise and fall of the charismatic leader of a seductive self-help movement. In the 1990s, a talk show host leads the "personality movement," an integrative approach to radical self-transformation. Mayah, the movement's architect and celebrity advocate, adopts a curious, wild child named Masha Isle. A guinea-pig for the movement, and the key to its future, Isle is the subject of the eight interviews that comprise this book. As the interviewer's objectivity disintegrates--even as the movement's legitimacy becomes increasingly suspect--he becomes obsessed with Masha. And all of that is thrown into question when tragedy strikes. The stunning debut of a new literary talent, and a fascinating take on the cult of personality: about celebrities need to destroy and recreate themselves to stay relevant, public personalities coming to belong to everyone, and about our need to see everyone as a kind of celebrity.
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The Book of Formation | Ross Simonini
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Three things you need to know about this book: One, it‘s truly strange and often disconcerting (TW for abuse and sexual assault). Two, there‘s a whole lot of wonderful mixed in with the weird. It‘s structured through a series of transcribed interviews between an unnamed journalist and Masha (later Marshall), the adopted son of a 90‘s “personality” guru called Mayah - think Oprah crossed with Scientology. Three, it‘s really, really good.

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