If there is Portugalone word to describe Elif Batuman's new novel The Idiot, it's the word "mundane." And that just might be the novel's greatest strength.
The book follows the year in the life of Selin, a Turkish-American freshman at Harvard. As Selin goes through her freshman year, she must navigate getting along with her roommates, an infatuation/ relationship with an older Hungarian student, and later, a trip to Europe to teach English.
Oh, and all the while dealing with the typical college freshman woes of examining the relationship between truth, existence, and language while studying linguistics. Casual.
SEE ALSO: Bill Gates just revealed his summer reading list, and it's as awesome as you'd expectBut what makes The Idiotshine is the way the novel meticulously documents the banal situations and observations Selin has in her day-to-day life. Whether it's Selin thinking about math ("I wasn't particularly interested in high school math acquisition, but nobody ever said we were put on this earth for our own entertainment") or Selin watching a crush dig through his pockets ("An amazing sight, someone you’re infatuated with trying to fish something out of a jeans pocket"), Batuman writes of Selin's adventures with a bluntness and dryness that's witty, so mundane that it's surreal, and yet, instantly relatable in a way that will make readers want to scream, "EXTREME SAME!"
And in a lot of ways, the dry narration is the point. The Idiotis a meandering, largely plotless novel that concerns itself with, yes, what happens to Selin, but also with what stories we tell, how we tell them, and to whom.
"I felt a wave of nausea to realize that I had propagated these stories just by telling Svetlana what was going on — just because I wanted to tell some other person the basic events of my own life," Batuman writes later on in the book.
Put all together, Elif Batuman's the The Idiotis a smart, fresh, and disarmingly relatable novel that's sure to be one of the best books you'll read all year.
This week on the MashReads Podcast, we read and discuss Elif Batuman's new novel The Idiot. Join us as we talk about language, passive vs. active characters, and what makes The Idiotso special.
Then, inspired by The Idiot, which follows conventions of Russian literature, we discuss impactful and formative Russian literature, including The Brothers Karamazovand Crime and Punishmentby Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Forty Roomsby Olga Grushin.
And, as always, we close the show with recommendations:
Aliza recommends catching up on Game of Thrones. MJ piggiebacks off of that and also recommends Funny or Die's Game of Thronesrecap series "Gay of Thrones."
Peter recommends Edgar Wright's new movie Baby Driver.
MJ has a host of micro-recommendations including: reading The New York Times Magazine's Letters of Recommendation and listening to Carly Rae Jepsen's album Emotionwhen you're having a bad day.
Next week are discussing the latest dive into the Spider-Man universe, Spider-Man: Homecoming, because, comic books, folks. We hope you'll join us.
And if you're looking for another book to sink your teeth into, we suggest Homegoingby Yaa Gyasi, our new MashReads book club pick for the month. Gyasi will be talking to MashReads IRL on Tuesday, July 25at 6:30 p.m. EDTat Mashable HQin New York City.RSVP here and join us!
Don't forget to follow MashReads on Facebook and Twitter for the latest, greatest book news.
Topics Books
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