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The Book of Formation

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
This debut novel—told in interviews—spans 20 years in the rise and fall of the charismatic leader of a seductive self-help movement.
In the 1990s, a talk show host leads the "personality movement," an integrative approach to radical self-transformation. Mayah, the movement's architect and celebrity advocate, adopts a curious, wild child named Masha Isle. A guinea-pig for the movement, and the key to its future, Isle is the subject of the eight interviews that comprise this book.
As the interviewer's objectivity disintegrates—even as the movement's legitimacy becomes increasingly suspect—he becomes obsessed with Masha. And all of that is thrown into question when tragedy strikes.
The stunning debut of a new literary talent, and a fascinating take on the cult of personality: about celebrities need to destroy and recreate themselves to stay relevant, public personalities coming to belong to everyone, and about our need to see everyone as a kind of celebrity.
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    • Kirkus

      October 1, 2017
      A singular novel told largely through interviews between an introspective journalist and the leaders of a New Age therapy said to transfigure its subjects' personalities.In his debut novel, Simonini constructs a parallel culture just a few degrees shy of the present. The center of this culture is the "personality movement," in which celebrity therapists who resemble Oprah with a side of psychodrama work to manipulate their patients' "p," which, the unnamed journalist says, "as best as I could understand, was some kind of energy substance at the root of our identities." Through their televised sessions, the therapists work to "turn" patients away from negative behavior patterns with a series of bizarre mental and physical exercises, ideally resulting in the patient gaining a new interpersonal identity. When the reporter agrees to interview the de facto leader of the movement, a woman known only as Mayah, he begins a 20-year correspondence that becomes the major focus of his career, providing an insider's look at a widespread cultural movement that brings into question the nature of celebrity and its intersections with personal wellness. The narrative is primarily composed of interviews between the journalist and Mayah's adopted son, Masha, who soon becomes the face of the empire. Though the interviews occasionally spiral into an invented jargon that is more confusing than illuminating, they are consistently hypnotizing as they build a portrait of an individual and his life's work of manipulating patients' bodies and minds to reconstruct their personalities. As the treatments Masha prescribes grow more physically demanding and accusations arise regarding sexual abuse, the public begins to question the ethics behind his practice, and the narrator struggles to remain objective as the roles of interviewer and subject blur.A debut reminiscent of modern art--often unsettling, not always easy or beautiful, but rewarding to the reader willing to grapple with its questions.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 30, 2017
      Simonini’s ambitious debut novel tells the story of the rise of a popular self-transformation movement through the eyes of a successful journalist who becomes increasingly involved with its central figures. Mayah Isle is a celebrity talk show host who uses her platform to spread the movement’s message—that personality is malleable, and that humans can enact radical change within ourselves by learning how to manipulate it. When the unnamed narrator is assigned to write a profile about Mayah, he is initially surprised when she instead directs him toward her enigmatic adopted son, Masha, who had previously been kept out of the public eye. Over the course of the novel, however, Masha takes over Mayah’s role on the talk show and succeeds her as the de facto leader of the personality movement. Through interview transcripts, the novel paints an intimate and complicated portrait of Mayah as the initially skeptical journalist’s relationship to the movement—and to his ailing body—undergoes its own fascinating transformation. Strikingly intelligent, the novel concludes on a haunting note that questions how much people can actually know about what makes them who they are.

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  • English

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