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Loading... You're Not Youby Michelle Wildgen
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This was a subtle, emotionally complex novel about a woman's relationship to self and others. The main character, Bec, is an aimless college student having an affair with a married professor. Taking a break from school, she gets a job as a caretaker for Kate, a young married woman with ALS. She performs intimate functions for her, often speaks for her, and becomes bonded with her to the point of identity confusion. Bec is hard to like, especially when she's screwing around with someone else's husband. But regardless of any judgment the reader makes, it is easy to empathize with her as she gets more and more involved in Kate's life and Kate's feelings. I don't want to reveal too much of the plot - not that the book is extraordinarily plotty - but I will point out that I enjoyed the motif of food threading through the book.As the story progresses, Bec starts to find herself as a very talented cook - while in the employ of a woman surviving with a feeding tube. I always enjoy books set in places I know, so I liked this one set in Madison. But that's just the background setting--The book itself is also great. College student Rebecca (though everyone calls her Bec) falls into a job as caregiver for a disabled woman living with fast-progressing ALS. It is almost unsettling how their friendship develops, and how Bec almost begins to lose herself in Kate; almost living her life FOR her: taking her shopping and to the farmers' market, raising money for ALS research, interpreting her speech to others. . . . Meanwhile Bec's own life is in chaos--she is uninterested in her classes and her major, she has a distant relationship with her parents, and she is in an affair with a married professor. Oddly, the caregiver job, though difficult and unusual, helps her to eventually rethink her life choices. Wildgen writes about people, places, feelings, and relationships in a way that rings so true and honest. I could not put this book down. While I truly enjoyed this book, I've been thinking about it for awhile trying to figure out how to say what I want to about it. I liked the three main characters, Bec, Kate and Kate's husband, right from the start. Bec is a self-absorbed college student who begins working to help Kate, who suffers from advanced ALS, as a home aide. Bec comes off as a smart, strong woman at the beginning but as the book progresses we find that Kate is the strongest of all of them, even, or because of, her health issues. The dissolving of the marriage between Kate and her husband is not handled well, he just kind of disappears and is rather hateful in the one spot he does reappear. It didn't feel at all right. . Once Kate leaves the story I found it very hard to read. It felt like the author wasn't sure what to do with Bec after the backbone of the book is gone. I don't always need a book to be wrapped up with a shiny bow, but this book just feels like it stops. I would still recommend it, just with some reservations.
“The kitchen smelled so rich—” says Bec, the novel’s central character, “all wine and meat and thyme and onion—it seemed we should be able to taste the air.” A chef’s knife is “a thing of beauty… its sleekness, its weighted, steady handle, its diamond point.” Empty plates “[gleam] with oil and… [bear] hardened, white smears of goat cheese.” Even anxiety is fruitlike: “I felt a plum-sized knot of misgiving.” There is much in this world to savor, Wildgen suggests.
YOU'RE NOT YOU IS NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE STARRING HILARY SWANK, EMMY ROSSUM, AND JOSH DUHAMEL. Bec is adrift. It's the summer before her junior year in college. She's sleeping with a married professor, losing interest in her classes, and equivocating about her career. She takes a job caring for Kate, a thirty-six-year-old woman who has been immobilized by ALS. As it turns out, before the disease Kate was a stylish and commanding woman, an advertising executive and an accomplished chef. Now, as she and Bec spend long days together, Bec begins to absorb Kate's sophistication and her sensuality, cooking for her, sharing her secrets, and gradually beginning to live her own life with a boldness informed by Kate's influence. The more intense her commitment to Kate, the further Bec strays from the complacency of her college life. And when Kate's marriageveers into dangerous territory, Bec will have to choose between the values of her old life and the allure of an entirely new one. No library descriptions found. |
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Kate is not an elderly person, but a vibrant 36-year-old former advertising executive now confined to a motorized wheelchair and having to rely on someone to bathe, dress and feed her. Slowly Bec becomes adept at the required tasks and comes to look on Kate as a friend and mentor.
This was at times very difficult to read. I could see Bec identifying more and more with Kate, and Kate relying on Bec as one would a best friend rather than an employed helper. And yet, Kate, kept a certain distance, because only she could, after all, truly experience this debilitating and ultimately terminal condition.
The title comes from an incident where Bec is speaking for Kate, whose speech is garbled at best. Kate, dissatisfied with Bec’s interpretation, informs her that when Bec is “translating” for Kate “You’re not you. You’re me.”
I knew “that scene” was coming and could hardly bear to watch it play out. And yet, there were still fifty pages to read. Fifty short pages for the author to resolve Bec’s grief and her sense of purpose. For her to find the path forward again.
It’s a great debut, and I’d be interested in reading more of her works. ( )