Jillian

Halle Butler

Book - 2015

Megan, a bitter young medical secretary, takes a break from her overwhelming feelings of social rejection by keeping track of the disgusting habits of her co-worker, Jillian. Meanwhile, Jillian's misguided "go for it!" attitude leads her towards a series of unadvisable decisions.

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Subjects
Published
Chicago, Illinois : Curbside Splendor [2015]
Language
English
Main Author
Halle Butler (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
227 pages ; 18 cm
ISBN
9781940430294
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This striking debut follows the downward spiral of two women whose barrage of rationalizations and condemnations begins to fray the edges of their realities. Twenty-four-year-old Megan is working in a gastroenterologist's office with Jillian, a single mother more than 10 years her senior whose relentless, and largely unfounded, chirping optimism grates against Megan's more realistic view. While Megan drowns herself in drinking and self-pity, mocking her friends, who have interesting careers, and pushing the limits of her boyfriend's patience, Jillian pins her hopes for a happier life on the purchase of a dog. Screenwriter Butler follows the flow of their thoughts about even the most mundane tasks with a talent for building the sense of claustrophobia that threatens to overwhelm the characters. This attention to the damage seemingly small setbacks can have on someone who is on the edge of a breakdown lends the book's journey heft, even though, objectively, not much happens. Still, it is a tight slice-of-life narrative, the sort of thing one might see in an indie film, and it will hold readers of literary fiction.--Thoreson, Bridget Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Eternal optimist Jillian, 35, works in a gastroenterologist's office in an upper-middle-class neighborhood in Chicago. New coworker Megan, 24, arrives in a state of permanent resentment: at having to work in such a stupid job, at Jillian and her much larger desk and chipper attitude. The duo's total lack of self-awareness makes them the perfect yin and yang for Butler's sly comedy of modern manners. When Jillian dreams of getting a cute dog, Megan is quick to cite the high cost of vet bills. Megan suffers from a handful of minor, but unpleasant, maladies and alienates her friends; Jillian blithely follows her own misguided bliss, leading her to neglect Adam, her young son. Heedless of outside advice, both women follow the paths they have chosen. As both women fray, this poison pill of a novel moves to its arch conclusion. Butler's aim is perfect, and her touch deft. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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

In this wickedly disaffected, sometimes-funny debut novel, Butler creates a story of two exceedingly unhappy women, both sliding into a downward spiral shaped by everyday misery and petty hatreds. Megan is a young woman trapped in a life she finds unbearably boring by her own discontent and inability to hoist herself out of a rut of mental squalor. A medical records technician in a gastroenterology office, she fills her spare time by drinking a ridiculous amount of beer, hating everyone she knows and idly contemplating suicide: "Everything about her life was so much the same from day to day that it almost didn't exist." The only thing she does with any enthusiasm is indulge in a particularly obsessive hatred for her co-worker Jillian, whose brittle and overblown optimism drives Megan crazy. Jillian is the office manager, a single mother, and beneath her cheery facade, just as unhappy, unsatisfied, and unpleasant as Megan. The novel consists of a series of ordinary eventsawkward parties, kitchen conversations, drunken missteps, the acquisition of a dogand its most striking feature is the way it digs into this small canvas of revulsion, bringing up recognizable portraits of our least generous, most unlikable urges. There is very little hope in this story but a great deal of outrageous, amusingly pointed meanness. Though it suffers from an oddly studious use of vulgarity, the novel has a degree of compelling, train-wreck allure. It offers up its characters for hatred and ridicule with such energy, obsessive detail and hopelessness that the reader can't help but read on, through exasperating flinches of sympathy and recognition. A novel that reads like rubbernecking or a junk-food binge, compelling a horrified fascination and bleak laughter in the face of outrageously painted everyday sadness. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.