Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: We Need to Talk About Kevin

Author: Lionel Shriver
Year: 2003
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 8.3
Genres/categories: Award winners, Fiction, Contemporary

Purchase/research links:

ISBN:
9780061124297
006112429X
Winner of the Orange Prize for Fiction in 2005.

That neither nature nor nurture bears exclusive responsibility for a child's character is self-evident. But such generalizations provide cold comfort when it's your own son who's just opened fire on his fellow students and whose class photograph--with its unseemly grin--is blown up on the national news.

The question of who's to blame for teenage atrocity tortures our narrator, Eva Khatchadourian. Two years ago, her son, Kevin, murdered seven of his fellow high-school students, a cafeteria worker, and a popular algebra teacher. Because he was only fifteen at the time of the killings, he received a lenient sentence and is now in a prison for young offenders in upstate New York.

Telling the story of Kevin's upbringing, Eva addresses herself to her estranged husband through a series of letters. Fearing that her own shortcomings may have shaped what her son has become, she confesses to a deep, long-standing ambivalence about both motherhood in general and Kevin in particular. How much is her fault?

We Need to Talk About Kevin offers no pat explanations for why so many white, well-to-do adolescents--whether in Pearl, Paducah, Springfield, or Littleton--have gone nihilistically off the rails while growing up in suburban comfort. Instead, Lionel Shriver tells a compelling, absorbing, and resonant story while framing these horrifying tableaux of teenage carnage as metaphors for the larger tragedy -- the tragedy of a country where everything works, nobody starves, and anything can be bought but a sense of purpose.


Similar books:

So Much for That
by Lionel Shriver

Big Brother
by Lionel Shriver

A Perfectly Good Family
by Lionel Shriver

The Post-Birthday World
by Lionel Shriver

We Were the Mulvaneys
by Joyce Carol Oates

Back When We Were Grownups
by Anne Tyler

Small Great Things
by Jodi Picoult

Prodigal Summer
by Barbara Kingsolver

Olive Kitteridge
by Elizabeth Strout

Don't Let Me Go
by Catherine Ryan Hyde

A Little Life
by Hanya Yanagihara

Have You Seen Luis Velez?
by Catherine Ryan Hyde

Beach Music
by Pat Conroy

The Memory Keeper's Daughter
by Kim Edwards

Where We Belong
by Catherine Ryan Hyde

Our Souls at Night
by Kent Haruf

Home
by Marilynne Robinson

600 Hours of Edward
by Craig Lancaster

True Places
by Sonja Yoerg

Freedom
by Jonathan Franzen