I had never even heard of The Latecomer by Jean Hanff Korelitz until J wrote a review of it on her blog. I was dithering about my non-existent TBR and what list to put it on when I realized it was available as an audiobook narrated by Julia Whelan right away at my library, so I nabbed it!
There are two things about me that you should know before we go further in this review. Here's the quick and dirty background. Regular readers probably know both of these things, but this is a bit of necessary background for new readers.
1) I grew up in a household with parents who were hoarders. There was a path from the front door to the couch, the kitchen, and the bedrooms, but that was about it. There was so much crap jammed in the bathroom that I could not bathe on a regular basis. The kitchen was filled with food, but much of it was years old. I did the best I could in my own bedroom, but I would not infrequently come home to bags of things not intended for my use crammed into my room.
2) I do not get along with my sister, my only sibling.
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In The Latecomer, Johanna and Salo Oppenheimer have triplets, two boys and one girl. But it turns out that each of those triplets is horrible in his or her own way and they don't really get along. I felt so seen in the scenes of everyone living in a house, but not talking and just living separate lives. When the triplets leave for college, Johanna has another baby (the latecomer, natch). We follow the family in an inter-generational novel.
There are themes of isolation, grief, privilege, race, and the ubiquitous plight of young people trying to find their place in this world.
There is also a fair amount of talk about hoarding in this book. It's done sensitively (hoarders have a mental illness), but I still struggled through those scenes, flashing back to my childhood when I couldn't find clean clothing, to moving my mother out of the house she lived in when I was in college and grad school, and to cleaning out her cabin after she died. I still have two totes of unsorted through things in our guest room that I need to sort through. I listened to this book and immediately began cleaning my house and vacuuming and dusting and opening the windows.
And the scenes with the siblings in a car who have nothing to say to one another? I felt it deep in my soul, but also? I wanted to not be hearing that scene.
I have some beefs with this book. Of course I do. The book is called The Latecomer, but she's really not even in the book until the last 25% and she's not all that important. There's a character who is done dirty (#JusticeForEli). But, while I actively disliked every person in this novel, right down to the poor illegitimate child and dirtbag white supremacist, I also wanted to keep listening - to know what was going to happen to everyone in this family. It was well-paced and beautiful.
It has not been since I read My Name is Lucy Barton that I have had such a visceral reminder of elements of my childhood that I would rather forget.
4/5 stars
Lines of note:
...Harrison joined the swim team, mainly because he liked the fact that when he had his head underwater, people didn't talk to him. (Part 1 - Chapter 8)
Ha! Haven't we all been there?
...being drawn deeper and deeper into the world of old houses and the mainly old people who lived in them. Houses stuffed with sadness, filled up room by room with sadness. Each enclosure silenced in sadness behind a closed door until the house itself was jammed and filthy. Some of the houses smelled terrible, some of them had owners who barely opened the door or spoke through a crack or slipped out and closed the door behind them...reeking of shame and fear. (Part 2 - Chapter 23)
I have no words for this.
There was no limit to what her brother Harrison could convert to pure assholery...(Part 2 - Chapter 25)
I actually audibly laughed at this line.
... so many families doing this together and the feeling of community was really overwhelming. (Part 3 - Chapter 31)
This is about a church-sponsored event. I feel this. I feel like it's so hard to create a community as an adult without church. I don't believe. I don't have faith. I am not envious of others for those things. But I am envious of a built-in fellowship of like-minded people at your fingertips.
Things I looked up:
Stendhal syndrome (Part 1 - Chapter 2) - Stendhal syndrome is a psychosomatic condition involving rapid heartbeat, confusion, hallucinations, and even fainting, allegedly occurring when individuals become exposed to objects, artworks, or phenomena of great beauty.
Stendhal syndrome was named after Marie-Henri Beyle (1783–1842), better known by his pen name, Stendhal, who described his experience with the phenomenon during his 1817 visit to Florence, Italy, in his book Naples and Florence: A Journey from Milan to Reggio. When he visited the Basilica of Santa Croce, where Niccolò Machiavelli, Michelangelo and Galileo Galilei are buried, he was overcome with profound emotion. Stendhal wrote:
I was in a sort of ecstasy, from the idea of being in Florence, close to the great men whose tombs I had seen. Absorbed in the contemplation of sublime beauty . . . I reached the point where one encounters celestial sensations . . . Everything spoke so vividly to my soul. Ah, if I could only forget. I had palpitations of the heart, what in Berlin they call 'nerves'. Life was drained from me. I walked with the fear of falling.
Jennifer convertible sofa (Part 1 - Chapter 2) - Jennifer Furniture (formerly Jennifer Convertibles) is an American retail company, based in Great Neck, New York. I think it's related to Ashley Furniture HomeStores? The sofas just look like regular old couches?
Diebenkorn ocean park paintings (Part 1 - Chapter 2) - Richard Diebenkorn is best known for the Ocean Park series of 145 landscape abstractions he began in 1967 after moving to Santa Monica, California, where he was inspired by his Ocean Park neighborhood. Numbered sequentially, the Ocean Park paintings are all tall, rectangular canvases, most of them divided by horizontal and vertical lines. Some seem to depict physical elements of landscape—the conjunction of ocean and sky or bands of colored clouds at sunset—while others imply more intangible elements such as space, atmosphere, or light.
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| Ocean Park #24 (1969) |
slab painting by Hans Hofmann (Part 1 - Chapter 2) - Hans Hofmann (March 21, 1880 – February 17, 1966) was a German-born American painter, renowned as both an artist and teacher. In his later works, Hofmann created works such as The Gate (1959–60), Pompeii (1959) or To Miz - Pax Vobiscum (a 1964 memorial after her death), that were loosely devoted to architectonic volumes and sometimes referred to as his "slab paintings." In these works, he used rectangles of sensual color that reinforced the shape of his consistent easel-painting format and sometimes suggested a modular logic, yet escaped definitive readings through areas of modulated paint and irregular shapes.
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| By Tate Gallery website. Copyright held by the estate of Hans Hofmann., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=57772187 - Hans Hofmann, Pompeii, oil on canvas, 84.25” x 52.25", 1959. |
Franz Kline (Part 1 - Chapter 2) - an American painter associated with the Abstract Expressionist movement of the 1940s and 1950s.
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| Kline, Painting #2 (1954) |
Agnes Martin (Part 1 - Chapter 2) - a Canadian-American abstract painter known for her minimalist style and abstract expressionism.
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| Starlight by Agnes Martin (1963) |
Andrew Crispo (Part 1 - Chapter 2) - an American art dealer and gallery owner based in New York. He later became involved in a number of widely reported legal cases. His legal history included a federal tax conviction, a sensational state criminal prosecution, association with one of New York’s most notorious homicide cases of the 1980s, later federal convictions involving threats against court personnel during bankruptcy proceedings, and dramatic civil litigation following the destruction of his Southampton home.
Ed Ruscha (Part 1 - Chapter 2) - is an American artist associated with the pop art movement. He has worked in the media of painting, printmaking, drawing, photography, and film.
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| Twentysix Gasoline Stations, 1963, by Ruscha |
Whitman, Grinnell, Roarke, Reed, Hendrix (Part 1 - Chapter 8) - Whitman is a private liberal arts institution in Walla Walla, Washington with an enrollment of about 1500. Grinnell is a private liberal arts college in Grinnell, Iowa with an enrollment of about 1700. Reed College is a private liberal arts college in Portland, Oregon with an enrollment of about 1300. Hendrix a private liberal arts college in Conway, Arkansas with an enrollment of about 1000. Roarke is made up for this novel.
Johnson Museum of Art (Part 2 - Chapter 14) - Museum at Cornell in Ithaca, New York.
Hat mentions:
None
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Have you ever read a book that brings up things from your childhood you'd rather forget? Did you know all these artists? Have you ever been to the Johnson Museum of Art?








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