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American Appetites
American Appetites
American Appetites
Audiobook14 hours

American Appetites

Written by Joyce Carol Oates

Narrated by Barbara Caruso

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

About this audiobook

Joyce Carol Oates has been hailed as America's foremost woman of letters. She is at her best in American Appetites, weaving a masterful tale of personal entanglements, fatal decisions, and courtroom drama. Ian and Glynnis McCullough, intelligent, professional and successful, are the envy of their affluent friends. But suddenly, an unexpected plea for help and a cancelled check send their tranquility spinning out of control.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 29, 2010
ISBN9781449861162
Author

Joyce Carol Oates

Joyce Carol Oates is a novelist, critic, playwright, poet and author of short stories and one of America’s most respected literary figures. She has written some of the most enduring fiction of our time, including We Were the Mulvaneys and Blonde. She is the Roger S. Berlind Distinguished Professor of Humanities at Princeton University and a recipient of the National Book Award and the PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in Short Fiction.

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Reviews for American Appetites

Rating: 3.8518518518518516 out of 5 stars
4/5

54 ratings3 reviews

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Extremely well written. Dense run on sentences with characters you cannot possibly like and strange events. Much to talk about and think about.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A well-to-do couple in an upper-middle class neighborhood live both literally and figuratively in a glass house. Although they appear happy on the surface, they have their appetites and their secrets. One night, their marital politeness explodes into a physical fight that ends with a fatal accident. Or did it end in murder? Excellent.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Taken from my comments elsewhere on this site -- I reread Oates' novel American Appetites (1989) yesterday. I picked it up because, on a quick flip, I was tickled to realize that a significant part of the storyline relates to a shady Egyptian boyfriend, Fermi Sabri, who's suspected of abducting and/or killing his American girlfriend. I never really noticed that the first time I read this, several years ago. And so, since the representation of Arab and Muslim characters in literature interests me nowadays, I decided to reread this book. (Can anybody think of any other Oates story that features an Arab or Muslim character...?)Anyway. The words that kept coming to mind as I read were 'impulsive' and 'displacement'. Those also seem, to me, like the kind of descriptors Oates might have been going for in terms of the 'American appetite' overall. There's a thoughtless, almost careless impulsiveness to the way that characters make significant personal decisions (to begin an affair, for instance). Most of Oates' main characters here are, as in many of her books, among the intellectual and economic elite. The men work think-tanky jobs; the women maintain themselves and their homes and write cookbooks. The cushion of money and social capital makes their lives seem almost buffet-like... and yet most of them seem bored and dissatisfied. So they impulsively sample whatever seems exciting (or is 'supposed' to be exciting) and/or obsess over whether others are doing the same, typically in a very passive aggressive way. Connected to the impulsiveness and suspicion and passive aggression are the male characters' constant displacements of their emotions: fears, neediness, anger. I felt like displacements really drove the plot. It also seemed like, when things fell apart, the (white, well-off) male characters tended to focus their suspicions on either 1) the dark outsider (the Egyptian Fermi Sabri), or 2) the infidelities of their women. Along those lines, because he's Not Really Guilty, and unwilling or unable to defend himself by admitting personal responsibility or vulnerability, the (white wealthy male) main character Ian loses control of his life and gets sucked into a media circus. For a while, he has no handle on the way he's portrayed to others. As a figure of suspicion, he can't 'represent himself' anymore, either socially or in court. In fact, in an interesting twist that I noticed on this second reading, he winds up effectively taking the place of Fermi Sabri by the end (both in the courtroom and in a relationship). It's another displacement, and one that Ian barely survives... by the end, it's not clear if he even wants to. Not my favorite novel by Oates, but somewhat suspenseful and easy to read. For a more compact piece along these lines, you might want to try her shorter novel 'Cybele.'