Wellness : a novel
(Large Type)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Published
[Waterville, Maine] : Thorndike Press, a part of Gale, a Cengage Company, 2024.
Appears on list
Status
Shirlington - Adult Large Type
LT F HILL
1 available

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Shirlington - Adult Large TypeLT F HILLAvailable

Description

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • OPRAH’S BOOK CLUB PICK • AN NPR BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR • The New York Times best-selling author of The Nix is back with a poignant and witty novel about a modern marriage and the bonds that keep people together. Mining the absurdities of contemporary society, Wellness reimagines the love story with a healthy dose of insight, irony, and heart. "A stunning novel about the stories that we tell about our lives and our loves, and how we sustain relationships throughout time—it's beyond remarkable, both funny and heartbreaking, sometimes on the same page.” —NPRWhen Jack and Elizabeth meet as college students in the gritty '90s Chicago art scene, the two quickly join forces and hold on tight, each eager to claim a place in the thriving underground scene with an appreciative kindred spirit. Fast-forward twenty years to suburban married life, and alongside the challenges of parenting, they encounter the often-baffling pursuits of health and happiness from polyamorous would-be suitors to home-renovation hysteria.    For the first time, Jack and Elizabeth struggle to recognize each other, and the no-longer-youthful dreamers are forced to face their demons, from unfulfilled career ambitions to childhood memories of their own dysfunctional families. In the process, Jack and Elizabeth must undertake separate, personal excavations, or risk losing the best thing in their lives: each other.

More Details

Format
Large Type
Edition
Large print edition.
Physical Desc
971 pages (large print) ; 23 cm
Language
English
ISBN
9798885797689

Notes

Description
"When Jack and Elizabeth meet as college students in the '90s, the two quickly join forces and hold on tight, each eager to claim a place in Chicago's thriving underground art scene with an appreciative kindred spirit. Fast-forward twenty years to married life, and alongside the challenges of parenting, they encounter cults disguised as mindfulness support groups, polyamorous would-be suitors, Facebook wars, and something called Love Potion Number Nine. For the first time, Jack and Elizabeth struggle to recognize each other, and the no-longer-youthful dreamers are forced to face their demons, from unfulfilled career ambitions to painful childhood memories of their own dysfunctional families. In the process, Jack and Elizabeth must undertake separate, personal excavations, or risk losing the best thing in their lives: each other"-- Provided by publisher.

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NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
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These sardonic literary fiction books star couples who seek an answer to fixing their marriage that may not exist. -- CJ Connor
A Unitarian Universalist congregation's search for a new pastor (Search) or a couple's seach for a wellness program that actually helps them (Wellness) leads to complex questions about fulfillment and belonging in these witty, thought-provoking novels. -- CJ Connor

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Strangers fall in love watching each other through their apartment windows across a Chicago alley. Jack escaped his stifling household in the Flint Hills of Kansas to attend art school. Elizabeth fled her wealthy, "inhuman" East Coast family to study psychology and seemingly everything else. It's 1993 in Wicker Park, a struggling neighborhood colonized by artists seeking cheap rents. Jack and Elizabeth, enraptured and entwined yet actually knowing little about each other even in marriage, alternate as deeply questioning narrators. Benjamin, an unscrupulous and manipulative trend-exploiter, accelerates brewing marital conflicts as Jack's early success as a conceptual photographer dead-ends in a lackluster teaching career; Elizabeth pursues dubious research projects at a chameleon-like facility called Wellness; they have a son, and invest in a ludicrously extravagant suburban home. Jack and Elizabeth's staggering hidden traumas are suspensefully revealed. In astutely observed, hilariously satirical passages, Hill also weighs the sublime, the absurd, and the malevolent as he considers family and self, art and academia, the power of suggestion, ethics, gentrification, parenting peer pressure, health fads, open marriages, and the digital trifecta of online addiction, algorithms, and profiteering with exhilarating insights and fluent compassion. Hill's prose is radiant and ravishing throughout this saturated, intricately honeycombed novel of delving cogitation as he evokes the wonders of the prairie and the city, and the ever-perplexing folly, anguish, and beauty of the human condition.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Hill (The Nix) blends a family chronicle with cultural critique in his expansive and surprisingly tender latest. Jack Baker, a photographer, and Elizabeth Augustine, a self-styled polymath, live across the street from each other as college students in 1990s Chicago, where each spies on the other through their windows. After they meet face-to-face at one of the alt rock shows Jack photographs, they connect over their interest in the local music scene and fall in love. Twenty years later, the couple and their eight-year-old son are planning a move to the suburbs. Jack, who's now an adjunct professor of art history, and Elizabeth, a researcher for a lab contracted by the FDA to study the placebo effect in wellness products, both wonder what's left of their bohemian youth and their long-ago voyeuristic romance. One night, they're invited to a sex club by another couple they meet at a bar, with whom they reminisce about the "abandoned" neighborhood where they first met, prompting a waiter to call out Jack for erasing the community's Puerto Rican population. As the Dickensian chronicle shifts between past and present and probes such issues as gentrification, toxic internet culture, and modern parenting, the realities of the couple's meet cute come into focus, and they learn the truth behind their first impressions. In the end, Jack and Elizabeth's story speaks to the way people craft narratives to give their lives meaning, and it asks whether believing in those narratives ultimately helps or harms. This stunning novel of ideas never loses sight of its humanity. (Sept.)

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Library Journal Review

Following the award-winning The Nix, Hill offers a smart, expansively written portrait of a marriage that also captures the social landscape of the last two decades. With windows facing across a narrow Chicago alley, students Jack and Elizabeth meet and fall deliciously in love in a move that feels fated. He's a waifish, searching photographer from the rural Midlands who feels as out of place in Chicago as he did on the prairie. She's from a wealthy, distinguished New England family and is eager to escape their glare, eventually working at a lab that studies placebos as inherently effective because people believe the stories created around them. Twenty years on, Jack and Elizabeth's marriage suffers from distance and disappointment as the author examines the stories we tell ourselves, the persuasiveness of believing, the burdens of family and class, the meaning of art, the dangers of social media, the very possibility of truth, how we change over time, and what we seek in others, in a narrative so heady readers may be tempted to take notes. VERDICT Jack's friend Ben says of his master's thesis, "Ostensibly it's about Wicker Park. But really? It's about life." Hill's book is ostensibly about one couple's relationship. But really? It's about life. Highly recommended.--Barbara Hoffert

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Kirkus Book Review

A bittersweet novel of love gained, lost, and regained over the course of decades. "They stare across the alley, into dark apartments, and they don't know it, but they're staring at each other." It's not an outtake from Hitchcock's Rear Window but instead the wistful longings of two lonely people. Jack Baker, newly arrived in Chicago from Kansas in the 1990s, is a talented photographer who bristles when practical-minded people ask him what his work is about--to say nothing of why he works with Polaroids, which, a hipster friend reminds him, "are mass-produced, instant, cheap, impermanent." Yes, and that's the point, for though Jack comes from the windblown prairie, he's pretty avant-garde. Elizabeth Augustine is a quadruple major at DePaul, "five majors if you count theater, which I have no talent for but enjoy nonetheless," and exactly the woman Jack hoped he would meet. Life proceeds: That arty hipster becomes a real estate mogul who plants them in a development very much outside their price range until Elizabeth pulls down the big bucks from the psychological research firm that gives Hill's latest its simple title. "Basically they were a watchdog group, a subcontractor for the FDA and FTC, sniffing out bullshit," Hill writes, but Elizabeth, scraping by while Jack pulls down pennies as an adjunct professor, discovers that there's hay to be made creating bullshit rather than exposing it--making airplane seats narrower, for instance, and then selling once normal-sized seats at a premium. Hill romps through our soufflélike culture with a nice sendup of academic literature and broad jabs at memes ranging from organic food ("one-hundred-percent bioavailable") to progressive parenting, open marriage, and cult behavior ("Elizabeth knew...that the thing that most effectively strengthened and deepened delusions was being surrounded by people who shared the same delusions") while delivering a story that suggests that while love may not conquer all, it makes a good start. A warmhearted satire that chronicles our "perfectly, stupidly, dreadfully elegant" accommodations to life. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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

*Starred Review* Strangers fall in love watching each other through their apartment windows across a Chicago alley. Jack escaped his stifling household in the Flint Hills of Kansas to attend art school. Elizabeth fled her wealthy, "inhuman" East Coast family to study psychology and seemingly everything else. It's 1993 in Wicker Park, a struggling neighborhood colonized by artists seeking cheap rents. Jack and Elizabeth, enraptured and entwined yet actually knowing little about each other even in marriage, alternate as deeply questioning narrators. Benjamin, an unscrupulous and manipulative trend-exploiter, accelerates brewing marital conflicts as Jack's early success as a conceptual photographer dead-ends in a lackluster teaching career; Elizabeth pursues dubious research projects at a chameleon-like facility called Wellness; they have a son, and invest in a ludicrously extravagant suburban home. Jack and Elizabeth's staggering hidden traumas are suspensefully revealed. In astutely observed, hilariously satirical passages, Hill also weighs the sublime, the absurd, and the malevolent as he considers family and self, art and academia, the power of suggestion, ethics, gentrification, parenting peer pressure, health fads, open marriages, and the digital trifecta of online addiction, algorithms, and profiteering with exhilarating insights and fluent compassion. Hill's prose is radiant and ravishing throughout this saturated, intricately honeycombed novel of delving cogitation as he evokes the wonders of the prairie and the city, and the ever-perplexing folly, anguish, and beauty of the human condition. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

Jack and Elizabeth fall deliciously in love as 1990s art-ambitious college students in Chicago, and 20 years on they're a long-married couple juggling the realities of jobs, parenting, and unrealized dreams. They soon realize that to find each other again they must sort out their lives, even if they must each go on different journeys. Following the New York Times best-selling, multi-best-booked The Nix. Prepub Alert. Copyright 2023 Library Journal

Copyright 2023 Library Journal.

Copyright 2023 Library Journal Copyright 2023 Library Journal.
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Library Journal Reviews

Following the award-winning The Nix, Hill offers a smart, expansively written portrait of a marriage that also captures the social landscape of the last two decades. With windows facing across a narrow Chicago alley, students Jack and Elizabeth meet and fall deliciously in love in a move that feels fated. He's a waifish, searching photographer from the rural Midlands who feels as out of place in Chicago as he did on the prairie. She's from a wealthy, distinguished New England family and is eager to escape their glare, eventually working at a lab that studies placebos as inherently effective because people believe the stories created around them. Twenty years on, Jack and Elizabeth's marriage suffers from distance and disappointment as the author examines the stories we tell ourselves, the persuasiveness of believing, the burdens of family and class, the meaning of art, the dangers of social media, the very possibility of truth, how we change over time, and what we seek in others, in a narrative so heady readers may be tempted to take notes. VERDICT Jack's friend Ben says of his master's thesis, "Ostensibly it's about Wicker Park. But really? It's about life." Hill's book is ostensibly about one couple's relationship. But really? It's about life. Highly recommended.—Barbara Hoffert

Copyright 2023 Library Journal.

Copyright 2023 Library Journal.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Hill (The Nix) blends a family chronicle with cultural critique in his expansive and surprisingly tender latest. Jack Baker, a photographer, and Elizabeth Augustine, a self-styled polymath, live across the street from each other as college students in 1990s Chicago, where each spies on the other through their windows. After they meet face-to-face at one of the alt rock shows Jack photographs, they connect over their interest in the local music scene and fall in love. Twenty years later, the couple and their eight-year-old son are planning a move to the suburbs. Jack, who's now an adjunct professor of art history, and Elizabeth, a researcher for a lab contracted by the FDA to study the placebo effect in wellness products, both wonder what's left of their bohemian youth and their long-ago voyeuristic romance. One night, they're invited to a sex club by another couple they meet at a bar, with whom they reminisce about the "abandoned" neighborhood where they first met, prompting a waiter to call out Jack for erasing the community's Puerto Rican population. As the Dickensian chronicle shifts between past and present and probes such issues as gentrification, toxic internet culture, and modern parenting, the realities of the couple's meet cute come into focus, and they learn the truth behind their first impressions. In the end, Jack and Elizabeth's story speaks to the way people craft narratives to give their lives meaning, and it asks whether believing in those narratives ultimately helps or harms. This stunning novel of ideas never loses sight of its humanity. (Sept.)

Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly.
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Hill, N. (2024). Wellness: a novel (Large print edition.). Thorndike Press, a part of Gale, a Cengage Company.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Hill, Nathan, 1975-. 2024. Wellness: A Novel. [Waterville, Maine]: Thorndike Press, a part of Gale, a Cengage Company.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Hill, Nathan, 1975-. Wellness: A Novel [Waterville, Maine]: Thorndike Press, a part of Gale, a Cengage Company, 2024.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Hill, N. (2024). Wellness: a novel. Large print edn. [Waterville, Maine]: Thorndike Press, a part of Gale, a Cengage Company.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Hill, Nathan. Wellness: A Novel Large print edition., Thorndike Press, a part of Gale, a Cengage Company, 2024.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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