Cleanness

Garth Greenwell

Book - 2020

"A queer American teacher describes a series of intimate encounters with lovers, friends, and students in and around Sofia, Bulgaria"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Garth Greenwell (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
223 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780374124588
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A young American teacher's reckonings with intimacy and alienation compose the through line of Greenwell's elegant and melancholy volume (after What Belongs to You). Nine stories track the unnamed narrator, who teaches literature in Bulgaria's capital, Sofia. Documenting the narrator's relationship with R., a Portuguese university student, and its dissolution, the stories are touchstones in his emotional development, from an attempt to shepherd a student through the crisis of first love in "Mentor," to an encounter with homophobia in the midst of an outpouring of national solidarity in "Decent People." As the teacher's hopes of a life with R. fade, he returns to sex with men he meets online, which proves both dangerous, as in the chilling "Gospodar," and revelatory, as in his encounter with the self-abnegation of the young man he calls Svetcheto, "Little Saint." Unresolved regarding his own character, "how little sense of myself I have, how there was no end to what I could want or to the punishment I would seek," the narrator struggles to guide the young people he teaches, conscious of the chasm of experience and expectation between them. Greenwell writes about sex as a mercurial series of emotional states and is lyrical and precise in his descriptions of desires and motivations he suggests are not subject to control or understanding. This is a piercingly observant and meticulously reflective narrative. Agent: Anna Stein, ICM Partners. (Jan.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

Greenwell's What Belongs to You won the British Book Award for Debut of the Year and was long-listed for the National Book Award, so pay attention to this new work. In Sofia, Bulgaria, as protestors swarm the streets, an American teacher preparing to leave after many years recalls significant events--e.g., a queer student's confession evoking his own first love--which helps him understand how we find ourselves, our beloveds, and our place in the world.

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Greenwell depicts the emotionally haunted life of an expatriate American teacher in Sofia, Bulgariawho seems to be the same unnamed character who narrated his highly praised debut novel, What Belongs to You (2016).At the heart of that last novel was Mitko, a gay hustler who fueled the narrator's pained desire, then disgust, and ultimately empathy, but he doesn't appear here. The narrator pushes more sexual boundaries this time, and Greenwell admirably pushes them too by depicting those desires with an unflinching frankness. Sadomasochism, unprotected sex, the narrator's voyeuristic attraction to one of his students: They are all elements of the story, portrayed in Greenwell's precise, elegant style. The narrator's experience seems to align with Greenwell's; the writer has acknowledged the autofictional nature of his writing. Depictions of rough sex bookend the novel, but it's the narrator's relationship with Portuguese student R., who appeared briefly in What Belongs to You, that occupies most of Greenwell's attention. Both marooned in Sofia, the men are happy together until they acknowledge the futilities both of staying in Bulgaria and in a long-distance relationship. One of Greenwell's talents is making everyday occurrences feel dramatic and full of ambivalence and nuance, but the scenes featuring the relationship at the heart of the novel suffer a bit in comparison to the dramatic sex depicted in other sections. Still, the simple beauty of the writing is something to behold. Here he is evoking a wind from Africa that assaults Sofia: "There was something almost malevolent about it, as if it were an intelligence, or at least an intention, carrying off whatever wasn't secure, worrying every loose edge."Brave and beautiful. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.