The Effect of Living Backwards FROM THE PUBLISHER
"Alice and Edith are sisters, best friends, and archenemies. Alice, the "good girl," is everything the stunning, wanton, and morally whimsical Edith is not. Both have an unhealthy attraction to shame and disgrace, and both are expert manipulators - a power that is tested and exploited when the plane they are traveling on is commandeered by a blind terrorist in what may or may not be a hijacking." There's something decidedly strange about Bruno, the terrorist - not to mention his inept collaborators and his perverse methods. When Alice is chosen to communicate with the hostage negotiator, Edith decides to align herself with Bruno. Alice is inexplicably drawn to the hostage negotiator, even as it becomes harder and harder to distinguish allies from enemies in what begins to feel like an elliptical airborne game show. Trapped on the plane with a pill-popping pregnant heiress, archaeologists on their way to a reunion, a wealthy, womanizing Indian man, and a dog named Verne, Alice learns a few valuable lessons about sibling rivalry, about love and about discovering who she is - even while pretending to be someone else.
FROM THE CRITICS
Elle
...darkly humorous, acutely edgy tale of emotional psychological survival...
New York Times Book Review
...savage and funny...Julavits has transformed our paranoia into a grab bag of impieties, skepticism and levity.
The New York Times
Julavits's first novel, The Mineral Palace, was an atmospheric horror show set in the Depression-era American West. The Effect of Living Backwards is far livelier and less portentous. Alice's self-loathing and her complex relationship with Edith provide the emotional core of a story that is savage and funny. The book is improbable, sure, but so wildly inventive that you hardly care. — Taylor Antrim
The Los Angeles Times
The Effect of Living Backwards shows off a young novelist with talent to burn and a desire to push beyond the smug posturing of many of her literary peers. Stephen Metcalf
The Washington Post
Heidi Julavits takes the title of her second novel from a passage in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass. "The effect of living backwards," the Queen tells Alice in that book, is that "it always make one a little giddy at first." For Julavits, whose first novel, The Mineral Palace, was published in 2000, the events of Sept. 11 seemed to create a kind of looking glass -- a tragedy so hard to comprehend that afterward we approached the world with a sort of giddy, guilty trepidation. Alex AbramovichRead all 9 "From The Critics" >
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING
An absolute tour de force of apparently limitless imaginative ability,
deep psychological insight, and astonishing verbal precision. In one fell
swoop, Heidi Julavits establishes herself as the Scheherazade of the new
Anti-Terror Age. Funny, unnerving, sophisticated, and dazzling in the
range of its invention, THE EFFECT OF LIVING BACKWARDS is a terrific and
important addition to our literature. George Saunders