There's going to be trouble A novel

Jen Silverman

Book - 2024

"Minnow Hunter has always tried to lead the life her single father, Christopher, modeled - private, quiet, hardworking, apolitical. So she is rocked when a split-second decision makes her the extremely public face of a scandal in the small town where she teaches. She even loses the support of her father, who stops speaking to her when the media start harassing him too. Overwhelmed, Minnow flees to a teaching position in Paris, hoping distance and time will let her start over. But what if Christopher wasn't always the restrained, conservative man he appears? What if he has a troubled and tragic past that he has taken great pains to bury - from the world and from his daughter? In Paris, Minnow falls into an exhilarating and all-cons...uming relationship with a young French man, whose activism has placed him at odds with his powerful family. As Minnow lets herself be pulled into the dangerous action her lover and his friends are planning, she draws close to repeating the secret tragedy from her father's past and forever changing her own future. Their intertwining stories take us through the turmoil of the late sixties student movements and the chaos of the modern world, as both Christopher and Minnow ask themselves how far they're willing to go for change. . . and whether they can live with the mistakes they make along the way"--

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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Published
New York : Random House [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Jen Silverman (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9780593448359
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Tilting in time between the student antiwar protests in the U.S. during the late 1960s and contemporary anti-administration demonstrations on the streets of Paris, Silverman's examination of the nature of rebellion, the influence of family, and one's pursuit of individuality coalesces around the stories of Minnow and Keen. For her role in helping a student at the prestigious private school where she teaches obtain an abortion, Minnow is fired amid a storm of notoriety. She decamps to Paris, where she falls in love with a younger man caught up in the Yellow Vest revolution against income inequality. Her story is offset by that of Keen, a Harvard grad student who also falls in love with a member of the countercultural resistance movement while confronting the revocation of his student deferment. As both Minnow and Keen become more deeply mired in the exigent circumstances of surrounding societal upheaval, their notions of their personal histories are challenged in the face of future existential threats. Politics does indeed make for strange bedfellows, but award-winning playwright and novelist Silverman (We Play Ourselves, 2021) excels at bringing the lives of her disparate characters into focus. Atmospheric and profound, Silverman's novel of defiance and acceptance shimmers with passion, repressed and unbridled.

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

The incisive if somewhat overstuffed latest from Silverman (We Play Ourselves) fuses two disparate narratives of contemporary Paris and 1960s Harvard with themes of protest and romance. In 2018, Minerva "Minnow" Hunter is fired from her high school teaching job in a tight-knit, conservative town, somewhere in the U.S., for reasons that are gradually revealed. She then moves to Paris, where she takes up a position in the English department of an unnamed university and falls in with the gilets jaunes protest movement against president Emmanuel Macron's elitist policies. In a parallel narrative set in 1968, a grad student named Keen works at Harvard in a lab that makes napalm for U.S. forces in Vietnam. Each day, he and his colleagues listen to the shouts of protesters from outside their door. His eventual decision to join the protestors results in violent consequences. Silverman takes a lot on, and not all of it sticks. (The formulaic romance between Minnow and a French protester is a particular letdown: "The curve of his shoulder. The jut of his jaw.... She imagined him naked"). Still, Silverman manages to build suspense as they gradually connect the dots between the parallel stories. There's plenty of intrigue bubbling beneath the surface of this surprisingly complex novel. Agent: Allison Hunter, Trellis Literary. (Apr.)Correction: An earlier version of this review used the wrong pronoun to refer to the author.

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

On the Harvard campus in 1969 and the Paris streets in 2018, parallel protagonists become enmeshed in radical politics and romance. Playwright Silverman's sophomore novel starts off strong, pursuing two storylines that will of course eventually converge. The earlier of the two, at Harvard, involves an organic chemistry graduate student named Keen who rescues a fleeing protestor from the police, then falls fast and hard for her and her world, though he works in the laboratory of a man Olya and her friends consider a war criminal. The 50-years-later plot revolves around Minnow, 38, an American woman living in France. Devastated after getting caught up in a scandal involving a student's abortion at the school where she taught, she escapes to Paris, where she, too, connects with a protester on the street, 23-year-old Charles. The rebellious scion of a wealthy man connected to President Emmanuel Macron, Charles is part of the gilet jaune (yellow vest) movement. In both cases, the political conversion experience involves hot sex and stirring scenes of activism (Keen at the Dow Chemical protest is wonderful), but eventually things go horribly wrong. Oddly, this book seems to be in sympathy with the attitudes and frustrations of the movements depicted, but the twin disasters are awful enough to scare an impressionable reader off radicalism altogether, especially because the upshot seems to be that political action can ruin people without changing the world at all. Young Charles says as much: "I think it must be a slow poison to come up against the limitations of justice again and again. The more you see, the more poison accumulates. But what changes in the end is you, not the systems, not the structures. Just you." (People make a lot of speeches to each other in this book.) In the end, the idea that one generation repeats the mistakes of the last is dramatized a bit too faithfully, and the ending leaves some big questions unanswered. A flawed but vibrant and juicy book, good conversation fodder for the politically inclined. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

2018 1 Minerva Hunter stumbled into the protest by accident, a cacophony of voices swerving her off her path. All around her, bundled into jackets and scarves, other people hurried in ones and twos toward that sharp static swarming call. It was mid-November, a Saturday, and it sounded to Minnow's ears as if all of Paris had descended. Curious, she followed the others down a narrow side street and then out onto a boulevard. It was densely packed, swollen with bodies. Children perched on their parents' shoulders, heads swiveling, faces bewildered and pleased. Minnow's eye picked out a bristling forest of placards hand-printed in French, long swooping banners, and far ahead, tall marionette puppets leaping and jerking above the crowd. The air was bright with excitement, as if everyone had shown up to the same surprise party. Minnow knew that Paris was a city people mythologized, but she herself hadn't brought a lot of fantasy to it. She had taken a job here because the job had presented itself at the moment in which her American life dissolved. Had it been located on another planet, she would still have unhesitatingly agreed. But when she'd landed in Paris, in September, the city had been drenched in sunlight, and she had found herself sliding into it like a warm bath. Her first day, she'd walked through the sweeping corridor of trees that marched down the southern side of the Jardin des Plantes, and the beauty had shocked and soothed her. Oh, she'd thought then: Paris. Now, coming across this strange and brilliant crack in the city's nonchalant quiet, she thought again, Oh, and the surprise curled through her like pleasure. Minnow pressed in closer and bodies shifted to permit her entrance. She brushed up against puffy down jackets, gleaming leather shoulders, bare arms and yellow construction vests. She recognized these from recent news broadcasts in which the French was spoken too quickly to catch but the day-glo yellow was unmistakable. The protestors were even calling themselves the gilets jaunes, or yellow vests--or maybe they were called that by others, she wasn't sure. She had seen them on TV more and more of late. The images slid past her, meant nearly nothing. "Excusez-moi," Minnow said hesitantly to the nearest puffy jacket. It turned, and she found herself cheek to cheek with a woman in her sixties. "Qu'est-ce qui se passe ici?" The woman was startled into a smile that grew broader as she took Minnow in. She answered Minnow's question with her own: "Vous etes d'ou?" "America," Minnow said, a little apologetically, and the woman laughed. "Ah, okay, America." The woman launched into a fast-paced explanation--something about a Facebook post, a video, a call to gather. Truckers, but also regular citizens, mothers and fathers, the workers. People who were hungry and angry, to whom nobody was listening. The woman made a sweeping gesture, triumphant. The gilets jaunes were gathered not only here but outside of Paris as well: partout, partout! "Vous voyez, Madame!" she cried. She spoke even faster, and Minnow listened carefully but understood only the disdain, anger, sorrow. The woman interrupted herself when the man beside her started to shout a rhythmic phrase. She picked up the chant with swift efficiency and all at once everyone was shouting it, creating the effect that had drawn Minnow in in the first place, that of total concentrated synchronicity: "Macron demission! Macron demission!" Glancing around, Minnow gave up estimating how many were present. Even as the crowd shuffled forward, it joined itself to yet another mass of bodies creeping along the avenue ahead, and the confluence forced all movement to a standstill. Even ground to a halt, the crowd was like a great machine coordinating all its parts. People shouted and chanted and greeted each other. "La Marseillaise" started playing, coming from an unknown direction. After a few moments of bobbing on tiptoe, trying to see over the shoulders in front of her, Minnow grabbed the side of the nearest lamppost and pulled herself up onto the narrow metal lip where the lamp's wide base narrowed into its pole. Wedging her sneakers into the metal furrows, she clutched the pole tightly to keep from slipping and stared out over the crowd. She realized for the first time that she had emerged onto the Champs-Elysees, the long avenue leading up to the Arc de Triomphe. Turning to look in all directions, she made out the metal-and-glass bulge of the Grand Palais in the distance, and farther still, rising up on the opposite bank, the delicate lace of the Eiffel Tower. The large marionettes were approaching down the aisle of the avenue, and people moved aside to make room. Lady Liberty beckoned with her long arms, torn bedsheet streamers floating from her wrists. The wind buffeted her, forcing the puppeteer to move side to side, laughing, as he tried to keep her upright. Minnow saw that he was a young man in a leather jacket with the collar turned up, dark hair falling into his eyes in messy tangles. He was almost directly beneath her now, his face upturned. She lowered her chin and as their eyes met unexpectedly, Minnow realized with a jolt that she recognized him. It was Charles Vernier. Charles was a fellow teacher at the university where Minnow worked. He had only recently graduated from it himself. Minnow reassured herself that this was why the students all loved him; he had been one of them not so long before. It irked her how much they adored him, students who were impassive and unimpressed in her own classes, who intimidated her a little bit with their European sophistication. She imagined that they looked down on her as a boring, nearly middle-aged (no, say it! middle-aged!) American woman who had appeared after their semester had already begun, to cover literature classes they didn't particularly care for. Charles, on the other hand, exuded cool. He was in the Communication and Media Department, which sounded much more au courant than simple, stuffy English lit. When he taught, he rested one narrow blue-jeaned ass cheek on his desk, long legs sprawled out, and the students hung on his every word. Passing his classroom once, she had seen this--the girls who had packed the front row to bat their eyelashes at him, the boys as well. Her students sat in the back and couldn't be lured any closer. The other teachers said Charles's family name, Vernier, as if Minnow might recognize it. This told her that he was not only wealthy, he was aristocratic. Even worse, Charles had the good fortune to be attractive, which irritated Minnow the most of all his sins. How devoted would his students be, she asked herself, if he were middle-aged, middle-class, and ferociously ugly? Though she had met him briefly at a faculty welcome dinner and seen him from time to time in the halls, they had never spoken. She had felt as if she'd never registered for him, a state that she was sensitive to, as she was often overlooked: her quietness, her stillness, her way of folding herself into herself so that eyes would go right past her. These things were her fault, she knew, and it had only become worse since the incident at her previous job, after which she had been fired. This was how she thought of it: The Incident; though it was in truth not one event but a chain of them spilling outward into the public eye. Now she caught herself practicing a particular way of standing in which she sank her chin into her shoulders as if trying to disappear entirely. Charles, on the contrary, entered every room to the turning of heads. It surprised her to find him here, mixed in with a cheering crowd, content to be one of many. His eyes firmly fixed on hers, she saw the exact moment in which he recognized her. His face went blank with surprise and he lost control of Lady Liberty, who soared high, seized by the wind. Minnow felt a rush of embarrassment, as if she had been caught somewhere she didn't belong. She jumped down from the lamppost into the crowd, her heart pounding. What did it matter, anyway? His opinion meant nothing to her; she didn't even know him. She turned her back on him and pushed off into the sea of bodies, seeking the safety of anonymity. Excerpted from There's Going to Be Trouble: A Novel by Jen Silverman 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.