Housemates A novel

Emma Copley Eisenberg

Book - 2024

"Bernie is a talented young photographer who has quit taking photographs in favor of drinking and drifting around Philadelphia. Leah is ambitious yet flailing grad student and journalist who must know the answer to every question. When Bernie replies to Leah's ad for a new housemate, they tentatively begin the kind of uncategorizable, queer relationship that can only flourish between two people who deeply understand each others' dreams and dissatisfactions. When Bernie's college professor dies in rural Pennsylvania and leaves her a complicated inheritance, Leah volunteers to accompany Bernie, turning the jaunt into a road trip with an ambitious mission: to document 2018 America in words and photographs. What ensues is a ...three-week journey through the state of Pennsylvania in which Bernie and Leah have eye-opening conversations with a wide-range of Americans, and develop a piercing intimacy that cracks each of them wide open. Ultimately, they create a joint work of genre-defying art that leaves them-and our nation-forever changed"--

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Subjects
Genres
Queer fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
New York, NY : Random House 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Emma Copley Eisenberg (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9780593242230
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Two queer artists explore pastoral Pennsylvania in the sumptuous if rambling latest from Eisenberg (The Third Rainbow Girl). Things kick off when Bernie Abbott, a barista and photographer, moves into a house in Philadelphia with four roommates including Leah McCausland, a media studies PhD candidate who is nonbinary. She befriends Leah and is turned on by the sounds of her sexual escapades through a shared wall. When Bernie learns her old professor, the late photographer Daniel Dunn, has bequeathed her his old cameras, plates, and negatives, she wants to reject the offer--Dunn was accused of sexual assault--but Leah changes her mind: "He's dead.... The slate is wiped blank." Then Leah receives a grant from her program and enlists Bernie's collaboration on a vaguely sketched project ("I just want to drive around and look at things and I'd write things down and you'd photograph them"). Bernie's mission to pick up Dunn's belongings at his home in rural Mifflin County gives the pair a destination. En route, they encounter rebellious cigarette-smoking Amish teens outside a country buffet and smarmy men lurking around their motel, and their partnership becomes not just creative but romantic. The story starts at a crawl, but once Eisenberg revs the engine, she reaches luminous heights. Readers will count themselves lucky to go along for the ride. Agent: Jin Auh, Wylie Agency. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A timely coming-of-age story about art and love from the author of The Third Rainbow Girl (2020). This novel begins with a middle-aged photographer describing a lengthy bout of depression and isolation with oblique--but very telling--references to how the death of her "housemate" factored into her sense of despair. When she finally reemerges, she encounters "two white kids" in a coffee shop and follows them home. Then this unnamed observer disappears--for a while--as she tells the story of Bernie (who "looked like a thin girl") and Leah (who "looked like a fat boy"). Within a handful of pages, Eisenberg establishes her novel's central themes and the context in which this narrative is taking place. The physical setting is Philadelphia, although Leah and Bernie will embark on a road trip that takes them through central Pennsylvania--a place that is very much itself while also serving as synecdoche for flyover America. The 2016 presidential election and the Covid-19 pandemic offer temporal touchstones. Shifting mores around sexuality and gender, the complicated demands of social justice movements, how we deal with bad people who create good art, and the difference between recording and actually seeing are just some of the topics Eisenberg lays out before setting her Gen Z protagonists loose to explore them. Bernie and Leah meet when Bernie answers an ad that begins "Four Swarthmore grads, looking for a fifth housemate" and ends with "Queer preferred (we all are)." There are also mentions of proactive communication and a chore wheel. In this household, Bernie is an outsider, someone who is not attuned to--and not at all invested in--this kind of intentional living, and Bernie's difference changes Leah. Eisenberg works through the issues she sets before the reader at the beginning of her novel with love and nuance. Or maybe it's better to say that she lets her main characters fumble along in a world in which these issues matter. If that sounds pedantic or prescriptive, it's not. Eisenberg has a poet's eye for truth, and her prose is gorgeously precise and empathetic while remaining cleareyed. Emotionally rich and quietly thought-provoking, this is simply a stunning debut. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

I. Where I lived then, there was no photography, no movies, no books, no art of any kind. It was enough to make me wonder why I had ever spent so long on it. Art! It had once been my whole day. My whole experience of living. People talk about how time moves slowly, but I had the opposite problem that season, a period of great depression that began in 2017 and lasted three years. During that time, I was always turning behind me to see where the morning had gone, the day, the month, the year. I watched videos of capybaras pushing their noble noses through various bodies of water or of beavers whose webbed hind feet slapped the concrete as they walked, semi-upright and pigeon-toed, with carrots wedged between their small, articulated hands and their toothful mouths. There was one over ambitious beaver in particular who I loved to watch as he continuously lost a single carrot from his hand/mouth bundle and stopped to pick it up, only to lose it, or a different carrot, again, moments later and slightly farther on in his travels. You would think at a certain point that the beaver would learn, that he would let one carrot go in service of retaining the rest and his general well-being. But no. He never learned. I felt like that beaver: the more I tried to take on, the more I dropped--emails for example, just simple offers of contact or meaningless photography work. I had my Social Security checks to cash, I had my house to move around in, and I had my body to feed--the only carrots I could carry. I also liked watching videos people had recorded of themselves walking around their neighborhoods in Philadelphia, videos in which nothing happened but their feet scuffing pavement and the world going by. In this way only, I left my house. A whole day could pass just in avoiding my office closet with its film and negatives that belonged to me as well as its books and papers that belonged to--what should I call her? I'll call her what they called me in her obituary, written almost fifteen years earlier in the paper of record: "housemate." Other things they wrote in The Housemate's obituary: aged 54, acute myeloid leukemia; there are no survivors. I resented this last part not just because I felt that I had survived her, but also because it made her sound alone when she was not. She had friends didn't she? And former students, who loved her too. You might be asking why I sank into such a Miss Havisham-esque state during that season when, as I've said, The Housemate died long before and to this I say: I don't know. Sometimes it just works that way. For many years you are fine, and then whammo, you are not. There was the 2016 election, yes, and the general state of the world, and the fact that I had dramatically decreased my work as a photographer, thinking, I am nearly seventy years old and it's time for me to enjoy my life. But none of this explains the way I felt. I felt like a stuffed animal that had lost its stuffing. I spent my time tending to other closets of lesser importance, taking out all the contained objects and sorting them into categories according to their use and usefulness to me. As I worked, I listened to the news, or sometimes--the only art I could tolerate--to musicals. I was especially partial to Sondheim, particularly Into the Woods, and particularly numbers that featured The Witch. Careful before you say, listen to me, I would sing along with her. Children will listen. Next I put all the useless-to-me things into boxes and called the thrift store on the avenue to send someone to pick them up. Finally, I bought new things from the everything website in order to absorb the space freed up by the things I'd just gotten rid of. This was an important step and a step that I savored; the only thing that brought me joy. In the story of an object and me, no time was ever so good as when its digital likeness and that of many others of great similarity were lined up vertically and auditioning to be mine. I scrolled slowly, considering. I took great pains to select the exact right scrubby sponge, the exact right set of black shoelaces, the perfect knit winter hat. I read all the reviews. When the new things were delivered, the device my friend's kid had set up in my kitchen made an ominous sound which was really just the sound of another living person doing a job they were underpaid to perform, a person I would never speak to or meet. After that sound was another--the real sound of a truck or van starting up again and driving away down my street toward the avenue. It was in this manner, too, that I made groceries appear at my door. I still live on this same street, a two-way where the cars go too fast despite all the stop signs and the houses are attached in rows with porches you can look down. I live in West Philadelphia, a shtetl most people have only heard of in the context of its cameo in the credits of a TV show starring Will Smith or because it contains the campus of an Ivy League university with a destructive hunger for real estate. I have lived here for much too long, so long that to fetch a half gallon of milk or go to the bank involves five to seven emotionally gutting interactions. Normally I can handle this, but that season I just couldn't. It wasn't just that I was afraid to run into people I used to know, but rather that I felt the neighborhood to be a graveyard of my past lives. Here the fancy yoga studio which used to be a camera store where I'd chat with the scruffy owner about lenses and buy film when I was still working as a photographer. Here the house that once belonged to a colleague of The Housemate's in the English department at the University, a woman with excellent taste in sweaters and ceramics and who, at parties, would serve cheddar cheese and rosemary crackers on the most beautiful rectangular trays. Everyone at those parties knew that The Housemate and I were an item but that didn't stop them from looking at us out of the sides of their eyes, whether because we were lesbians or because she was a professor, though not mine, and I a graduate student, I can't say. We were exactly the same age anyway; she had been one of those wunderkinds who'd graduated high school at fifteen. Let's give them something to look at, The Housemate would say, holding up a loaded cracker and awaiting the opening of my mouth. There the building containing the first apartment The Housemate and I ever shared. There the fancy grocery store which used to be a soul food restaurant where The Housemate and I would go for long conversations about projects we wanted to do together. There was a black dog with a flat snout who liked to lie on its checked floor in slants of sun. We could pick a little operation, nothing but a Ferris wheel and a funnel cake stand that moves from town to town and follow them, she said to me in that restaurant once, while leaning down to pet the dog. She had an idea which was new then but is old now which was to record people's voices speaking and have that be the result of the work instead of a book. The tapes she made on those trips are still in my office closet to this day. And so on. It's funny, in a non-haha kind of way, considering everything that came after--how the pandemic would force us all into confinement, alone in our homes--that I was ahead of the curve by several years during that time, creating the conditions of isolation for myself. So it was a fluke in a way, very unlikely and totally by chance, that I was even out of my house for long enough to see Bernie and Leah that day in the coffee shop. Why did I follow them back to their house? Was it only because they were so beautiful and so young? No, comes the answer. It was also because there were two of them and they had that map. It was about a year into my artless season, May of 2018, when I woke to a terrible pain in my back and a leak in my moka pot. No matter how I screwed and unscrewed the thing, water dripped out and the coffee would not burble up to where I could get it. I watched some videos, first about moka pots and then about other things. I looked on the everything website but the new pot wouldn't arrive until the following day. Plus walking, I knew, was the only thing that would resolve the back issue. I loitered in the vestibule of my house for what might have been an hour, futzing with the ribboned laces on my shoes in hesitation. Then, suddenly, I whipped open the door and was outside. It was hot, the world having apparently skipped spring and gone straight to summer. The tree my neighbor had planted in a bucket was now too large for the bucket and the church had changed its flags. At the avenue, I took the dreaded turn left, eastward toward the University. After a few blocks of seeing no one I recognized, I felt emboldened and slowed my walk, breathing through my nose. I kept my eyes straight ahead and when I reached the anarchist coffee shop, I decided to chance it, getting in line behind a bosomy person with a thigh tattoo of a rat eating a piece of pizza. The tattoo peeked out from where her pants (very short) ended and her socks (very tall) began. Excerpted from Housemates: A Novel by Emma Copley Eisenberg All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.