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Landscapes
Landscapes | Christine Lai
6 posts | 2 read | 3 to read
A darkly absorbing, prismatic debut novel from Christine Lai, set in a near future that is fraught with ecological collapse and geopolitical upheaval, Landscapes explores memory, empathy, and art as an instrument for recollection and renewal. In a ruinous country house in the now barren English countryside--decimated by heat and drought--and in a dusty library damaged by earthquake and floods, Penelope archives what remains of the estate’s once notable, now diminished, art collection. As she delves into the objects and images, she also keeps a diary of her final months in the dilapidated estate that has been her home for two decades and a refuge for those who have been displaced by disasters. Out of necessity, Penelope and her partner, Aidan, have sold the house and with its scheduled demolition comes this pressing task of building the archive. But with it also comes the impending arrival of Aidan’s brother, Julian, who will return to have one final look at his childhood home. Penelope suffered at the hands of Julian twenty-two years ago during a brief but violent relationship, and as his visit looms large over her, she finds herself unable to tamp down the past in her efforts to build a possible, if uncertain, future. In this elegiac and spellbinding blend of narrative, essay and diary, Penelope’s past, present and future collide as fear and loss close in around her, and she clings to art as a means of understanding, of survival, and of reckoning. Recalling the works of Rachel Cusk and Kazuo Ishiguro, Landscapes is an evocative reinvention of the pastoral and the country house novel for our age of catastrophe, and announces the arrival of an extraordinarily gifted new writer.
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Lindy
Landscapes | Christine Lai
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Pickpick

An elegant, melancholy novel set in near-future Europe, where an art historian recovering from trauma is archiving a private library in a once-grand house that‘s now in ruins. Her journal entries are interspersed with her ekphrastic writings, mostly about sexual violence depicted in paintings by the Old Masters, but also of work by her first love, JMW Turner. Meanwhile, an obscenely rich man is making his way to her. #CanLit

Chelsea.Poole Great photo and great review! 2mo
Suet624 Fascinating review. 2mo
batsy Nice review! This sounds so good. 2mo
Lindy @Chelsea.Poole @Suet624 @batsy thanks friends! This novel is longlisted for the Republic of Consciousness USA Canada Prize. 2mo
33 likes2 stack adds4 comments
quote
Lindy
Landscapes | Christine Lai
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In Tabula Rasa, though the scarred surfaces of the tables bear evidence of mutilation, the rebuilt forms also speak of the need to piece together the fragments of a fractured life. Salcedo has spoken of how the victims of sexual violence live with the constant balance between destruction and mending, the unrelenting effort to overcome disintegration.

quote
Lindy
Landscapes | Christine Lai
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People once spoke of Ruinenlust, of the picturesque and melancholy beauty of abandoned buildings.

Lindy Image is from Radtke‘s memoir which also addresses the topic of ruin porn: 2mo
24 likes1 comment
quote
Lindy
Landscapes | Christine Lai
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Each sculpture was the chaos of memory made tangible. Art as a way of nullifying the past, of moving the self beyond pain.

blurb
Lindy
Landscapes | Christine Lai
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February 16: poetry as refuge; queer history + fiction from Japan, Finland, Canada, UK & Australia
https://youtu.be/yjknPyadxC8

#booktube #CanLit #womenintranslation #audiobooks

22 likes1 stack add
review
Kazzie
Landscapes | Christine Lai
Pickpick

I liked it. The ending was not what I imagined, and yet hopeful still. The buildup through the discussion of art depicting rape and sexualization as ? enjoyable seemed to lead up to the rape of the protagonist- which did not happen. Julian seems like a psychopath- yet this is never named. The future world where classes enjoy privileges seemed very plausible- happening already. The climate dystopia was more engaging than the art critique

Lindy I read your review after reading the novel and I find it surprising that you missed the passage about Julian‘s violent attack on Penelope. 2mo
3 likes1 comment