A Girl Is a Halfformed Thing, Eimear McBride
A Girl Is a Halfformed Thing, Eimear McBride
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A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing

Author: Eimear McBride

Narrator: Eimear McBride

Unabridged: 7 hr 34 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 06/09/2015


Synopsis

The dazzling, fearless debut novel that the New York Times hails as “a future classic”.

WINNER: The Bailey Women’s Prize for Fiction, the Goldsmiths Prize, the Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year Award, the Desmond Elliott Prize, the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize

A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: The New York Times Book Review, NPR, Vanity Fair, New York, Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, Star Tribune, Electric Literature, Publishers Weekly, Kirkus Reviews, Library Journal

In scathing, furious, unforgettable prose, Eimear McBride tells the story of a young girl’s devastating adolescence as she and her brother, who suffers from a brain tumor, struggle for a semblance of normalcy in the shadow of sexual abuse, denial, and chaos at home. Plunging readers inside the psyche of a girl isolated by her own dangerously confusing sexuality, pervading guilt, and unrelenting trauma, McBride’s writing carries echoes of Joyce, O’Brien, and Woolf. A Girl is a Half-formed Thing is a revelatory work of fiction, a novel that instantly takes its place in the canon.

SHORTLISTED FOR THE DYLAN THOMAS PRIZE AND THE FOLIO PRIZE

About The Author

Award-winning author Eimear McBride was born in 1976 and grew up in Ireland. At twenty-seven she wrote A Girl is a Half-formed Thing and spent just under a decade trying to have it published. The novel went on to win the Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction, the Desmond Elliot Prize, the Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year, the Goldsmiths Prize, and the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize, among others. She currently lives in Norwich with her family. Her second novel is The Lesser Bohemians.


Reviews

Goodreads review by persephone ☾ on June 12, 2023

update : and said gorgeous girls were right to trust her taste 😌 (would i recommend the book to anyone ? perhaps not, as it deals with extremely difficult subjects and the prose is so fragmented that at times it becomes quite difficult to navigate through it. but did i love it ? yes. a hundred times......more

Goodreads review by Ron on September 25, 2014

Americans finally have a chance to see what all the fuss is about over Eimear McBride’s “A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing.” Its success has the makings of a minor literary legend. The Irish writer’s debut novel languished for nine years without a publisher until it was finally released last year by a t......more

Goodreads review by Katie on March 23, 2021

A Girl is a Half Formed thing is written in non-grammatical fractured prose. It tells the story of a girl's sexual awakening, her experience of her brother's terminal illness and her relationship with her mother and the Catholic church. The first half was brilliant. The fragmented riotous prose suit......more

Goodreads review by Emily on April 24, 2021

I think this book worked for me because I listened to the audiobook. At first I found the style difficult and wasn’t sure if I could put up with it for long. However this soon changed and listening to it rather than reading It made her stream of consciousness so fluid and lyrical. I have to say I di......more


Quotes

“One of the most groundbreaking pieces of literature to come from Ireland, or anywhere, in recent years.”Vanity Fair

“For all its experiments with form, the events of A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing are easy for readers to follow—McBride’s great skill is in communicating a clear story through a complicated use of language. . . . A remarkable book . . . Her language is artfully deranged to make familiar experiences strange and new but in that derangement there is vitality, even joy. The desolation of the tale is held in a gripping tension with the richness of the telling. . . . McBride is pushing further even than Beckett did into what he called ‘the syntax of weakness.’ Her very words have holes in them.”The New York Review of Books

“That this deliberately stunted narrative language retains its power past the girl’s childhood and into her adult years is a testament to McBride’s verbal dexterity and tight narrative focus. . . . A heartbreaking but stunning read, a portrait of suffering barely visible under cloudy water.”Chicago Tribune

“Shattering . . . Be prepared to be blown away by this raw, visceral, brutally intense neomodernist first novel. . . . While McBride’s girl may be a half-formed thing, there’s nothing half-formed about even her most fragmented sentences. . . . McBride’s writing is so alive with internal rhymes, snippets of overheard conversation, prayers and unfiltered emotion, and her narrator so feisty, that readers can't help but be pulled into the vortex of this devastating, ferociously original debut.”—NPR

“Brilliant . . . bracing, unrelenting, and audacious . . . Yes, this book actually gave me nightmares. And yet I did not want to stop reading it. . . . A literary sensation.”The Millions

“A future classic . . . A Girl subjects the outer language the world expects of us to the inner syntaxes that are natural to our minds, and in doing so refuses to equate universal experience with universal expression—a false religion that has oppressed most contemporary literature, and most contemporary souls.”—Joshua Cohen, The New York Times Book Review

“Blazingly daring . . . [McBride’s] prose is a visceral throb, and the sentences run meanings together to produce a kind of compression in which words, freed from the tedious march of sequence, seem to want to merge with one another, as paint and musical notes can. The results are thrilling, and also thrillingly efficient. The language plunges us into the center of experiences that are often raw, unpleasant, frightening, but also vital.”—James Wood, The New Yorker

“Simply a brilliant book—entirely emotionally raw and at the same time technically astounding. Her prose is as haunting and moving as music, and the love story at the heart of the novel—between a sister and brother—as true and wrenching as any in literature. This is a book about everything: family, faith, sex, home, transcendence, violence, and love. I can't recommend it highly enough.”—Elizabeth McCracken

“A life told from deep down inside, beautiful, harrowing, and ultimately rewarding the way only a brilliant work of literature can be.” —Michael Chabon

“A novel both formally innovative and psychologically unsparing. . . . Ms. McBride’s shattered soliloquys masterfully convey the maelstrom of teenage sexuality. . . . The hurt of adolescence is a familiar subject for a novel, but Ms. McBride’s stylistic daring makes it fresh and raw.” –The Wall Street Journal

“It was a really astonishing book. We felt that from the first time we read it—it stood out from the crowd. . . It’s incredibly original. It has a raw energy we all responded to.”—BBC

"Written in a Joycean stream of consciousness with an Irish lilt, and sentence fragments transmit the pervasive sense of urgency, of thoughts spinning faster than the tongue can speak. . . an unforgettable novel.”—Publishers Weekly, starred review

"McBride calls to mind both Joyce and Stein in her syntax and mechanics, but she brings her own emotional range to the table, as well. . . open-minded readers (specifically those not put off by the unusual language structure) will be surprised, moved and awed by this original novel. . . This is exhilarating fiction from a voice to watch."—Kirkus Reviews, starred review

"Eimear McBride is that old-fashioned thing, a genius. . . . The adventurous reader will find that they have a real book on their hands, a live one, a book that is not like any other."Anne Enright, The Guardian

"A wonderful but harrowing first person stream of consciousness."—Harper’s Bazaar