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Monday, May 4, 2015

Gillian Flynn-Gone Girl

The Most Popular Bestsellers Books - Thriller - Gillian Flynn's Gone Girl Info, Plot Summary, Review and Gillian Flynn Biography Gillian Flynn-Gone Girl



Author: Gillian FlynnGillian Flynn


Book: Gone Girl (432 Pgs.)Gillian Flynn-Gone Girl




Gillian Flynn-Gone GirlGone Girl tells the story of Nick and Amy Dunne's difficult marriage, which is floundering for several reasons. The first half of the book is told in first person, alternately, by both Nick and Amy; Nick's perspective is from the present, and Amy's from the past by way of journal entries. The two stories are very different. Amy's account of their marriage makes her seem happier and easier to live with than Nick depicts. Nick's story, on the other hand, talks about her as extremely anti-social and stubborn. Amy's depiction makes Nick seem more aggressive than he says he is in his story.

Nick loses his job as a journalist due to downsizing, and Amy loses her job as a magazine quiz writer shortly after. The couple relocate from New York City to his small hometown of North Carthage, Missouri, in part so the couple can help care for his dying mother. He opens a bar using the last of his wife's trust fund and runs it with his twin sister, Margo. The bar provides a decent living for the three Dunnes, but the marriage becomes more dysfunctional. Amy loved her life in New York and hates what she considers the soulless "McMansion" which she and Nick rent.

On their fifth wedding anniversary, Amy goes missing. Nick becomes a prime suspect in her disappearance for various reasons: he used her money to start a business, increased her life insurance, and seems unemotional, at times even smiling inappropriately, on camera and in the news. The police later find boxes of violent pornography and other items he had denied purchasing in the woodshed in Margo's garden, further implicating him.

In the novel's second half, the reader learns Amy and Nick are unreliable narrators and that the reader has not been given all of the information. Nick has been having an affair and Amy is alive and hiding, trying to frame Nick for her "death". Her diary is revealed to be fake, intended to implicate Nick to the police. Nick soon discovers that Amy is framing him but has no way of proving it.

Amy is robbed by fellow guests of a motel she was hiding in and is left without any money. Meanwhile, Nick begins pleading for her return, to convince her that he loves her still. Desperate, she seeks help from her obsessive first boyfriend, Desi. He agrees to hide her, but Amy soon feels trapped in his house as Desi becomes possessive. She murders him and returns to her husband, saying she had been kidnapped and imprisoned by Desi. Nick knows she is a killer, but he stays in the marriage because he has no proof of her crimes and deceits. Amy forces him to fake his love, hoping that he will eventually love her the way she wants to be loved. She begins writing her memoirs, while Nick writes his own memoir exposing Amy's lies. Aware of his intentions to expose her, Amy then impregnates herself with Nick's semen, and makes him delete his book by implicitly threatening to kill their unborn child. In the end, Nick chooses to stay with Amy, keeping the charade forever, for his child's sake.

Source: Wikipedia




  • Gillian Flynn-Gone GirlGillian Flynn-Gone Girl
    Gillian Flynn: Gone Girl





Gillian Flynn: Gone Girl - Review
Reviewed by Jenna Cyprus


Gone Girl is full of enigmas. Author Gillian Flynn has done something very difficult: she writes about gendered behaviors that seem like they should be stereotypical, but come off as inherently fresh, insightful, and ultimately chilling. She's able to get into the heads of Nick and Amy so well, you might feel like you've gotten whiplash by jumping back and forth between their points of view. If you haven't already read the Gone Girl novel, then you should get on it right away. Or not. Because one thing's for sure - this book will leave you feeling extremely unsettled and wondering about the loved ones in your own life.

Warning, there are spoilers ahead. The distant husband who's checked out of his marriage, pretending like everything is alright while he lives a double life. The neglected housewife who just can't handle the turbulent dramas of chores, small-town gossip, and social status. Sure, it seems like it would be easy to reduce the characters in Gone Girl down to stereotypical terms. However, they've got this extra dimension that remind us that, hey, sometimes we do fall into trope categories in real life. But like Nick and Amy, these tropes are still full of complexity, which prevents us from writing them off, even when they do something that seems so, so predictable.

The characters themselves even try to fit each other into boxes. Flynn's got a gift of internal dialogue - we get to read as Nick makes his initial impression on Amy. "Nick's the kind of guy you can drink a beer with, the kind of guy who doesn't puke in your car. Nick!" We get to be a fly on the wall as the characters strive to figure each other out, and we get to watch as they fail to actually know each other.

Amy dreads becoming a certain type of person, a certain type of trope. As she sits in Nick's small town, she dreads becoming like the other residents that she admittedly looks down on. When it comes to the limited job options around her, she criticizes, "Basically, I was supposed to be a housewife for pay. Irony enough for a million Hang in There posters."

It's easy to see why Nick and Amy feel trapped. Like so many of us, they're afraid of being two dimensional. They're afraid of being forced to be someone they're not. And while yes, some of their behaviors inevitably fit in familiar-sounding tropes, they're able to throw readers a number of curveballs.

Flynn's book takes the 1950s ideal of what an American family should be, and she flips it completely on its head. She tears it apart with tweezers and causes the reader to reflect on feminism and how it fits into today's modern family life. After all, Nick and Amy are the ultimate unreliable narrators. Nick seems so genuine and honest, but he quickly loses the trust of his own sister, and arguably the trust of the readers, once his affair is revealed. After you seen the various funhouse reflections of these characters, you'll definitely start wondering what would happen if your family was thrust into the media spotlight during a high profile trial. What would the police dig up? What would you want to hide and why?

Gone Girl does an excellent job at having us scrutinize the gender roles in the modern family, picking apart the aspects that make our society progressive.or not so progressive. Flynn does an excellent job at getting us into the heads of the quintessential dysfunctional family, one that slides down into ruin because the characters are never quite honest with each other.



2015@http://albbookspreviews.blogspot.pt-Top Bestsellers Books - Gillian Flynn-Gone Girl

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