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Rules For Werewolves (2015)

Rules for Werewolves (2015)

Book Info

Author
Rating
3.93 of 5 Votes: 4
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ISBN
1612194761 (ISBN13: 9781612194769)
Language
English
Publisher
melville house

About book Rules For Werewolves (2015)

-So what should we do?-What do you mean?-Like, knock?-When you're out in the country you just open the fence and go in. -I thought that was how you got shot out in the country.-Look. You can see the house over there. Let's cut through the woods.-You don't want to stay on the road?-I'm not a car. I can do what I want.kirk lynn's background is in theater, which explains his decision to write this novel almost entirely in dialogue, but also explains why he's just so dingdang good at it. because it can't be easy; sustaining the shifting perspectives of a veritable pack characters over the course of a nearly 350-page book in which there is also sooo much ambiguity and … weirdness with only scattered, fragmenty bits of conversation holding the narrative together. but i'm telling you - it works.i'm also telling you, for some reason it took me a full week to get through this book. not because i didn't enjoy reading it, and not even because i had so much other stuff going on, although i did, but because i wanted to let it sit with me a bit, for savoring. it's fast-paced, like any novel driven by dialogue, but it's deceptively so: there's a surprising amount of density to this that made me want to pause every so often to just absorb it all. it's rich with metaphor, with larger-than-context import, social commentary, perfect observations, all sprinkled into a relatively low-action book in which teenage squatters move from one temporarily unoccupied suburban home after another, forming a society, a family, and occasionally turning into werewolves. maybe.-I can't be caught.-You'll be surprised. There's some fast guys on the force.-I mean, I can't be caught alive.the parts that aren't in dialogue are still rooted in the theatrical; there are a few long monologues that are literally monologues - pieces of the pack's history and the personal stories of members of the pack meant to be read aloud, through closed doors, to soothe individuals when they are … unwell. the characters are wise in the way that the homeless are wise - perspectives that are other, but not incorrect, and it's frequently funny, in that dark absurd beckett vein of humor. - How are we going to recruit people?-You were recruited. So was I.-Recruited for what? What's the cause? -It doesn't have words yet.-We're just getting by.-That's the center of it. The civil rights to not be looked down on just because of the way we live off the land.-We don't live off the land.-We do. -We break into houses and we steal canned goods.-Listen, if they cut down all the forests and poisoned all the streams and put up a bunch of ridiculous super-supermarkets - then I don't think it's right to arrest us for living off the land they gave us. People didn't shoplift in the Wild West.-That's because you would get shot.-It's because on the way from your house to the store you passed trees with fruits in them and fields with corn and woods with little rabbits and streams with trout.-You make it sound like a supermarket, too. -Food used to not come from stores. It used to be something that was around. So if they filled up the land with bullshit they can't say I'm bullshit for saying I live off the land when I help myself to what I find.the dialogue is all rendered like that - without quotation marks or attribution, and there are times when it can get a little muddy remembering who is in conversation with whom, but the chapter titles are very handy: Susan explains to Carl the plan for if the maid comes home. Anquille joins them about midway through.Tanya tells Malcolm what she found when she went to feed Susan.Bobert, Anquille, Susan, Angel, and Tom decide the hat is a god.Malcolm is the first one back. Bobert, Tom, and Anquille are tied for second, then some others.see?? perfectly clear! and in some ways, it doesn't always matter who is talking, it's a word-blanket novel like The Lost Scrapbook, where the overarching tone is more important than the individuals, and here there's a sort of glazing over several characters (i.e. "then some others") that depicts them almost like interchangeable cogs, as dangerous as any group of driftless kids who fall into the company of a charismatic leader, especially one who claims to not be a leader, where the collective attitude is -It's easier to do what other people want than to want on your own.. there is a story to this; a progression of events, but for me the pleasure of the book was its atmosphere, one that kinda just creeps into your pores and propels you through on this mixture of laughter and terror, sometimes at the same time. When I had my teeth in her I could feel her try to pull away. It made the bite worse. I realized it was an evolutionary thing. The better my teeth are at inflicting pain, the more damage my bite is going to do to living prey, because pulling away does as much damage as biting.i expected this to be a suburban dystopic - some kind of a.m. homes-style dehumanization allegory, and it kind of is, but i took away so much more from it. for all its minimal and streamlined structure, it's insanely ambitious in scope, and i folded over so many pages that i wanted to come back to and ruminate on when it was all over. it's a really lovely surprise of a novel that i would pair with When We Were Animals, and i am just sitting here with an encouraging grin suggesting that maybe more people should give it a shot! 4.5 stars, if you're asking.

I talked to a lot of people about this book while I was reading it. I usually described it by saying something like this, "It's very minimalist, is 99% dialogue, and often you don't even know who's talking. It's very weird, really messes with your head sometimes, and I feel like it should bug me but instead I really, really dig it." I have only one other book I think I can compare it to, but it's actually a good comparison and I think the books would go well together: Your Fathers, Where Are They? And the Prophets, Do They Live Forever? by Dave Eggers. Their styles are similar, with the emphasis on dialogue. The characters also felt connected, with Eggers' central character and the leader Malcolm in Werewolves seeming to share some of the same imbalances. Rules for Werewolves follows a group of outcasts who squat in empty suburban houses. There are shades of surrealism that come and go, leaving you not exactly sure what is really happening. (This is where the minimalism and lack of action enforce that sense of disorientation.) Malcolm, their leader, seems to be a little crazy and possibly a sociopath. Then there's Bobert, the teenage runaway they take in who gets to know the group and figure out how they work. There are power struggles and burglaries and run ins with the cops. There is scheming and violence and action. (Although action in this book is often described as "Fight. Fight. Fight. Fight. Fight." a stylistic quirk I really came to enjoy.) Ultimately the book is about belonging and the rules of the pack and the tenuous hold of society. A really different read.

Do You like book Rules For Werewolves (2015)?

Readers may be put off, if they were to flip through the book, only seeing unassigned lines of dialogue. Don't let this hinder you, it's one of my favorite parts. You naturally put yourself in the shoes of characters when you read. When the dialogue isn't assigned, it frees you from wandering into the past or the future of any given character, and keeps you in the present of their story, their actions, their choices, and their changes. It also shows Lynn's amazing writing abilities in voice. Once you adjust to the format, you can hear Bobert talking, and Malcom making decisions, and Angela disobeying the pack. You don't need the dialogue to be assigned because you know them, you're with them.This book is clever, dark, and raised the hair on the back of my neck. A train wreck I couldn't turn my eyes from, while being fresh and thoughtful.Rules for Werewolves is one of those books I finished and can't wait to read again. I will recommend this to everyone I know - all of them.
—Dani

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