7/4/2023 0 Comments Manhattan beach novel review![]() ![]() Upon first meeting Anna, Nell advises her to wear lipstick to work so her boss will be more lenient and let her leave the office for lunch. ![]() Anna’s coworker Nell, for example, is hyper femme, and uses traditional markings of femininity to gain advantage in the male dominated society of ’50s New York City. Liz von Klemperer: I was drawn to the theme of using conventional femininity as a survival tool. With Manhattan Beach, Egan once again demonstrates her mastery of the sweeping, multi-character narrative. Of course, the investigation is merely the tipping point from which conflict proliferates and allows the vast narrative to breathe. True to the novel’s noir-inflected atmosphere, Anna investigates her father’s life, looking for answers to the questions that have dogged her. ![]() At the center of its orbit is one Anna Kerrigan, haunted by the mystery of her father’s disappearance. The characters in Pulitzer Prize winner Jennifer Egan’s latest novel range from sailors to gangsters, bankers, and union workers. ![]() Stanley discuss Jennifer Egan’s National Book Award–longlisted historical novel Manhattan Beach. In this edition, Liz von Klemperer and T.A. Double Take is a literary criticism series in which two readers tackle a highly-anticipated book’s innermost themes, successes, failures, trappings, and surprises. ![]()
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