My Nemesis


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About The Book

<b>Charmaine Craig</b> is the author of the novels <i>Miss Burma</i> longlisted for the National Book Award and the Women's Prize for Fiction and <i>The Good Men</i>. Formerly an actor she teaches in the program in fiction at UC Riverside and lives in Los Angeles. Tessa is a successful writer who develops a friendship first by correspondence and then in person with Charlie a ruggedly handsome philosopher and scholar. Sparks fly as they exchange ideas about Camus and masculine desire and their intellectual connection promises more - but there are obstacles to this burgeoning relationship.<br><br>While Tessa's husband Milton enjoys Charlie's company Charlie's wife Wah is a different case and she proves to be both adversary and conundrum to Tessa. Wah's traditional femininity and subservience to her husband strike Tessa as weaknesses and she scoffs at the sacrifices Wah makes as adoptive mother to a Burmese girl Htet. But Wah has a kind of power too especially over Charlie and the conflict between the two women leads to Tessa's martini-fueled declaration that Wah is 'an insult to womankind.' As Tessa is forced to deal with the consequences of her outburst she wonders if Wah is really as weak as she has seemed or if she might have a different kind of strength altogether.<br><br>An exercise in empathy an exploration of betrayal and a charged story of the thrill of a shared connection - and the perils of feminine rivalry - <i>My Nemesis </i>is a brilliantly dramatic and captivating story from a hugely talented writer. From the acclaimed author of <i>Miss Burma</i> comes a tense and thought-provoking exploration of an intellectual affair and its reverberations across the lives of two couples. <b>Taut bristling and psychologically profound</b>...Slimmer punchier and more tightly wound [than her previous work] <i>My Nemesis</i> highlights her talent for capturing the minutiae of interpersonal drama. A compelling discourse around race motherhood and marriage Much of the power of this <b>excitingly barbed </b>book is Craig's complex portrait of a woman for whom rage is the default. A gin-drenched Valkyrie Tessa weaponises her feminism with cruel aggression. She joins a line-up of fascinating female characters each as unforgiving as they are unforgivable. A <b>blisteringly smart </b>novel about feminism identity and desire that refuses easy answers and will linger for a long time in my mind. The writing is <b>biting and propulsive</b>...This confident work is sure to spark conversations. <b>A simple plot summary cannot capture the depth</b> of Craig's treatment of such big themes as femininity and masculinity motherhood and fatherhood friendship and love...Craig offers an effective inquiry into the elusive nature of intimate relationships whether they stem from love or hate. Charmaine Craig's<b> brilliant anatomization of mid-life art identity and infidelity</b> shares in the intellectual grace and precision of its characters' philosophical pursuits yet beneath the ruminative surface this book churns with desire and remorse. I was bowled over by this brilliant narrative of desire complicity and the limits of empathy.<i> My Nemesis</i> is<b> a compact masterpiece</b> in the confessional mode one that reverberates long after the last page is turned. Bravo! I devoured this sly seething novel. So marvelously perceptive so effortlessly elegant it lays bare the horror of what husbands and wives expect of each other. <i>My Nemesis</i> is <b>a pearl cultivated in justified rage</b>. I loved it. As deeply empathic as it is thrillingly addictive <i>My Nemesis </i>is <b>a stunning and brave literary feat.</b> Charmaine Craig's searing prose and complex vision challenges us to abandon the safety and certainty of our own perspectives. What begins as a novel of female rivalry quickly transforms into a profound spiritual meditation on the danger of our inability - or unwillingness - to imagine and dignify the inner life of the other. With luminous grace Craig's writing is a testament to the transcendent power and peace possible when we dare to try. <i>My Nemesis</i> is an exhilarating act of defiance a novel that lights a match and sends the whole question of female characters' likability up in flames. Charmaine Craig is a writer unafraid of contradictions - at once elegant and unruly cool yet searing - and here she's given us a fiercely philosophical novel that is also <b>irresistibly addictively readable</b>. A timely exposition of trust after trauma . . . In reimagining the extraordinary lives of her mother and grandparents Craig produces some passages of <b>exquisitely precise</b> description <b>Like many of the best books</b> <i>Miss Burma</i> feels rooted in its time and place while also laying bare timeless questions of loyalty infidelity patriotism and identity - not to mention the globally perpetuated unfair treatment of women <b>[A] riveting account</b> of the treacheries fractures and courageous acts of wartime Charmaine Craig wields powerful and vivid prose to illuminate a country and a family trapped not only by war and revolution but also by desire and loss. Both <b>epic and intimate</b> <i>Miss Burma</i> is a compelling and disturbing trip through Burmese history and politics. <b>Taut bristling and psychologically profound</b>...Slimmer punchier and more tightly wound [than her previous work] <i>My Nemesis</i> highlights her talent for capturing the minutiae of interpersonal drama. A compelling discourse around race motherhood and marriage Much of the power of this <b>excitingly barbed </b>book is Craig's complex portrait of a woman for whom rage is the default. A gin-drenched Valkyrie Tessa weaponises her feminism with cruel aggression. She joins a line-up of fascinating female characters each as unforgiving as they are unforgivable. A <b>blisteringly smart </b>novel about feminism identity and desire that refuses easy answers and will linger for a long time in my mind. The writing is <b>biting and propulsive</b>...This confident work is sure to spark conversations. <b>A simple plot summary cannot capture the depth</b> of Craig's treatment of such big themes as femininity and masculinity motherhood and fatherhood friendship and love...Craig offers an effective inquiry into the elusive nature of intimate relationships whether they stem from love or hate. Charmaine Craig's<b> brilliant anatomization of mid-life art identity and infidelity</b> shares in the intellectual grace and precision of its characters' philosophical pursuits yet beneath the ruminative surface this book churns with desire and remorse. I was bowled over by this brilliant narrative of desire complicity and the limits of empathy.<i> My Nemesis</i> is<b> a compact masterpiece</b> in the confessional mode one that reverberates long after the last page is turned. Bravo! I devoured this sly seething novel. So marvelously perceptive so effortlessly elegant it lays bare the horror of what husbands and wives expect of each other. <i>My Nemesis</i> is <b>a pearl cultivated in justified rage</b>. I loved it. As deeply empathic as it is thrillingly addictive <i>My Nemesis </i>is <b>a stunning and brave literary feat.</b> Charmaine Craig's searing prose and complex vision challenges us to abandon the safety and certainty of our own perspectives. What begins as a novel of female rivalry quickly transforms into a profound spiritual meditation on the danger of our inability - or unwillingness - to imagine and dignify the inner life of the other. With luminous grace Craig's writing is a testament to the transcendent power and peace possible when we dare to try. <i>My Nemesis</i> is an exhilarating act of defiance a novel that lights a match and sends the whole question of female characters' likability up in flames. Charmaine Craig is a writer unafraid of contradictions - at once elegant and unruly cool yet searing - and here she's given us a fiercely philosophical novel that is also <b>irresistibly addictively readable</b>. A timely exposition of trust after trauma . . . In reimagining the extraordinary lives of her mother and grandparents Craig produces some passages of <b>exquisitely precise</b> description <b>Like many of the best books</b> <i>Miss Burma</i> feels rooted in its time and place while also laying bare timeless questions of loyalty infidelity patriotism and identity - not to mention the globally perpetuated unfair treatment of women <b>[A] riveting account</b> of the treacheries fractures and courageous acts of wartime Charmaine Craig wields powerful and vivid prose to illuminate a country and a family trapped not only by war and revolution but also by desire and loss. Both <b>epic and intimate</b> <i>Miss Burma</i> is a compelling and disturbing trip through Burmese history and politics.
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