Mood swings A novel

Frankie Barnet

Book - 2024

"In a pre-apocalyptic world not unlike our own, a young Instagram poet starts an affair with a California billionaire who's promised a time machine that will make everything normal again-whatever that means. Everyone knows something's off, but nobody can agree on just what it is. Maybe it's the weather; maybe everyone's just so damn sensitive these days. Or maybe it's because the animals of the world have finally had enough, besieging towns and cities and terrorizing their human residents. Jenlena and her best friend Daphne are two humanities grads in their early 20s, trying to find their way in a society that has just eradicated all animals for the safety of humanity. In the post-fauna world, Jenlena transform...s from an aspiring poet to a gig worker, capitalizing on other people's grief by selling house plants that have come to replace pets and cosplaying as dogs for pay. Meanwhile Daphne, a once-promising student, flounders in a deep depression, smoking weed and ditching work to hang out with her once famous, now canceled boyfriend. When Jenlena meets the California billionaire Roderick Maeve, and the two become romantically entangled, she is exposed to a new understanding of wealth, power, and the gender economy--just as the world hurtles toward its alleged salvation"--Book jacket.

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Subjects
Genres
Apocalyptic fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Astra House [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Frankie Barnet (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
291 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781662602597
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Barnet follows up the graphic novel Kim: A Novel Idea with the bonkers story of a future without animals. Mammals and other creatures across the planet have been conducting organized as well as random acts of terror--raccoons destroyed a power plant, a chimpanzee ripped a kid's face off, a pet rabbit tore out its owner's eyes, and more. "It was like one day all the animals just got together and decided," Barnet writes, implying the violence is in response to exploitation and ecological degradation by humans. Responding to the panic, American billionaire Roderick Maeve uses lethal sonic technology to kill all the animals on the planet. In this altered world, 22-year-old poet Jenlena spends a lot of time on Instagram, where pet cosplay is trending, and she gets a gig dressing up as a dog for people who miss their pets. After Jenlena ditches one of her clients, she has a chance meeting with Maeve, who's currently building a time machine that would return people to a more harmonious past where animals exist. Barnet adds some lively dialectical discourse to the zany proceedings, as a pessimistic cult protests Maeve's plan because it would "erase the blame" of ecological collapse. Despite the sobering material, this is a hoot. Agents: Audrey Crooks and Ellen Levine, Trident Media Group. (May)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Barnet presents a canny portrait of the doomscroll generation, set in an absurdist near-future world. Jenlena is 21 when animals finally seek vengeance on humans. After creatures of all sorts start attacking people around the world, California billionaire Roderick Maeve funds the development of a sonic signal that kills each and every animal on Earth. Jenlena and her best friend, Daphne, emerge into Quebec's new normal with English degrees and little sense of purpose: Jenlena takes to stealing and reselling houseplants (which have become a stand-in for pets) and acting as a dog for hire for lonely customers, while Daphne works at a coffee shop and navigates dating a canceled musician named Jordan. Looming in every corner of this increasingly dreadful society, wracked by environmental disasters and political turmoil, are the Moon Bethlehems--a radical cult determined to save the planet. When Jenlena begins sleeping with the Roderick Maeve, the cult enemy no. 1 who is dead set on making time travel a reality, she is swept up in his exceptional privilege. This is a sharp satire of a hyperonline culture, with genuinely moving insights into modern inequality and climate crisis throughout. "We've all become like someone on their deathbed, calling up our old transgressions and making apologies," Moon Bethlehem mouthpiece (and Jordan's ex-girlfriend) Moon Cicero says. "It's pretty easy, really, when you've got no real intention of changing. You know you don't have to because you haven't got the time." Jenlena and her friends epitomize the wild oscillations between naïveté and cynicism that can define young adulthood, and, while each character is ridiculous at times, they are all delightfully multidimensional. In an apt formal choice, Barnet peppers in the "mental pollution" (as one character calls it) of the online world: she includes tweet-style posts and Instagram-angled poems (as well as a couple of pages of animal doodles and one single photo of Ted Cruz). This book is a great choice for fans of Patricia Lockwood's No One Is Talking About This (2021). An off-kilter, hauntingly hilarious debut novel. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.