How to fall out of love madly: a novel

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
The Dial Press
Publication Date
[2022]
Language
English

Description

“Three relatable thirty somethings drive this ode to womanhood. Learning the hard way to love themselves, the women teach invaluable lessons.”—People“Everyone who loves Sally Rooney should be reading Jana Casale!”—Julie Buntin, author of Marlena  Three women confront the compromises they’ve made to appease the men they love.Joy and Annie are friends and roommates whose thirty-something lives aren’t exactly what they’d imagined. To make ends meet, they decide to rent their extra bedroom to Theo, who charms Joy with his salt-and-pepper hair and adoration of their one-eyed cat. When Annie goes to live with her boyfriend, Theo and Joy settle into a comfortable domesticity. Then Theo brings home Celine, the girlfriend he’s never mentioned, who is possibly the most stunning woman Joy has ever seen. Joy resolves to do whatever it takes to hold on to him, falling ever deeper into an emotional hellscape of her own making. She is too obsessed to realize that Celine’s beauty doesn’t protect her from pain. Haunted by an event from her past, Celine can’t escape her shame and finds herself in an endless cycle of self-sabotage.Annie is baffled by Joy’s senseless devotion to Theo, but she’s consumed by her own obsessions: she can’t stop parsing her commitment-phobic boyfriend’s texts in an exhausting mission to maintain his approval. At work, where she fully embraces her natural assertiveness, Annie is a star. But when an anonymous letter lands on her desk accusing her esteemed and supportive boss of sexual misconduct, she is forced to decide who and what she’s willing to stand up for.Perceptive, mordantly funny, and full of heart, How to Fall Out of Love Madly examines women’s many relationships—with one another, their mothers, their work, men, and themselves—to reveal their underlying power and complexity. It asks, why do so many smart, compassionate, otherwise empowered women tolerate egregious behavior from the men they love? And what will it take for them to reclaim control?

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Best friends Annie and Joy were fooling themselves that they could split the rent two ways on their three-bedroom place. Theo responds to their ad for a roommate, and Joy's heart responds to Theo, instantly and deeply. The triangle at the heart of Casale's second novel, though, trades Theo for his girlfriend, Celine, who shares narrating duties with Joy and Annie. After high-powered Annie moves in with her boyfriend, whom even she, on some level, knows is utterly disappointing, sweetheart Joy finds, well, joy in taking care of Theo like a wife (or a mother?) would, going so far as to wash his dirty underwear even as his relationship grows with the gorgeous and aloof Celine, who is also, surprise, privately struggling with being her exact, excruciating self. As in her intimate and astute debut, The Girl Who Never Read Noam Chomsky (2018), Casale illuminates her protagonists' inner worlds with a nearly alarming authenticity. These cis, straight women know both who they are and how to perform the women men want them to be; they've been on both ends of life's most sensitive questions and know that a kind response and an honest one aren't usually the same thing. Many readers will feel seen. Plot is subtle here, and far from this book's draw. It's the excitingly, exhilaratingly tiny and true movements of these women's hearts and minds that will move How to Fall Out of Love Madly solidly into readers' own.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Library Journal Review

Cash-strapped Joy and Annie decide to rent their apartment's extra bedroom to charming, older Theo, and Joy and Theo get kind of snuggly close when Annie then decides to move in with her boyfriend. Soon, however, Theo brings in Celine, the gorgeous girlfriend he's neglected to mention, and jealous Joy fails to recognize Celine's own deep pain. Following the attention-getting debut The Girl Who Never Read Noam Chomsky.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

Three young women come to terms with the roles of the men in their lives and the sad fact that they put them there. "I can't hear them having sex, but I did hear her say one time, 'There's no way I'm doing that.' And I can't help but wonder what it is she doesn't want to do....And if she won't do it, would I? I don't think so, but when she said that I wanted to scream out and say, 'I'll do it!' " This is Joy, who is hopelessly in love with her roommate Theo, who has an exquisitely beautiful girlfriend named Celine who frequently stays over and...yeah. In an even-more-impressive continuation of the work she began with her debut, The Girl Who Never Read Noam Chomsky (2018), Casale has again taken the detritus of women's inner lives--the things we wished had never happened, the thoughts we wished we'd never had, the endless self-flagellation about our bodies--and made something funny, warm, and compelling; something sisterly in the finest sense of the word. Joy and her roommate, Annie, take Theo as a third housemate to help make ends meet, but then Annie's boyfriend, Jason, invites her to move in with him. This would be more of a win if Annie didn't have to manage every single interaction she has with Jason to avoid irritating him, asking something of him, or frightening him off. In one bitterly funny scene, he lights up the whole house with candles in order to tell her he's not ready to get married but someday he will be. Casale's narrative voice is deadpan, funny, and clean without being faux flat or pretentious. She controls the narrative not seamlessly but with interesting flexes of the storytelling muscle. Sometimes she tells you what's going on from a God's-eye view. "This is where Joy could have spared herself." "Here was where so much came together for Annie." Other times she lets us directly into the women's internal monologues, with first-person sections. The most fascinating of these belongs to Celine, a person who has to live with being so attractive that it's all anyone can ever think about. Casale is an American Sally Rooney, so smart about friendship and love. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* Best friends Annie and Joy were fooling themselves that they could split the rent two ways on their three-bedroom place. Theo responds to their ad for a roommate, and Joy's heart responds to Theo, instantly and deeply. The triangle at the heart of Casale's second novel, though, trades Theo for his girlfriend, Celine, who shares narrating duties with Joy and Annie. After high-powered Annie moves in with her boyfriend, whom even she, on some level, knows is utterly disappointing, sweetheart Joy finds, well, joy in taking care of Theo like a wife (or a mother?) would, going so far as to wash his dirty underwear even as his relationship grows with the gorgeous and aloof Celine, who is also, surprise, privately struggling with being her exact, excruciating self. As in her intimate and astute debut, The Girl Who Never Read Noam Chomsky (2018), Casale illuminates her protagonists' inner worlds with a nearly alarming authenticity. These cis, straight women know both who they are and how to perform the women men want them to be; they've been on both ends of life's most sensitive questions and know that a kind response and an honest one aren't usually the same thing. Many readers will feel seen. Plot is subtle here, and far from this book's draw. It's the excitingly, exhilaratingly tiny and true movements of these women's hearts and minds that will move How to Fall Out of Love Madly solidly into readers' own. Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

Cash-strapped Joy and Annie decide to rent their apartment's extra bedroom to charming, older Theo, and Joy and Theo get kind of snuggly close when Annie then decides to move in with her boyfriend. Soon, however, Theo brings in Celine, the gorgeous girlfriend he's neglected to mention, and jealous Joy fails to recognize Celine's own deep pain. Following the attention-getting debut The Girl Who Never Read Noam Chomsky.

Copyright 2022 Library Journal.

Copyright 2022 Library Journal.
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LJ Express Reviews

Cash-strapped Joy and Annie decide to rent their apartment's extra bedroom to charming, older Theo, and Joy and Theo get kind of snuggly close when Annie then decides to move in with her boyfriend. Soon, however, Theo brings in Celine, the gorgeous girlfriend he's neglected to mention, and jealous Joy fails to recognize Celine's own deep pain. Following the attention-getting debut The Girl Who Never Read Noam Chomsky.

Copyright 2022 LJExpress.

Copyright 2022 LJExpress.
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