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We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves Hardcover – 26 February 2014
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Karen Joy Fowler
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Karen Joy Fowler
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Product details
- Publisher : Serpents Tail; Main edition (26 February 2014)
- Language: : English
- Hardcover : 336 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1846689651
- ISBN-13 : 978-1846689659
- Dimensions : 14.4 x 3.1 x 22.2 cm
- Customer Reviews:
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Review
A novel so readably juicy and surreptitiously smart, it deserves all the attention it can get -- Barbara Kingsolver * New York Times Book Review * A dark cautionary tale hanging out, incognito-style, in what at first seems a traditional family narrative. It is anything but -- Alice Sebold Fowler has given us the gift of a splendid novel. Not only is the story fascinating, moving, and beautifully written, but also it ripples with humor; its quirky characters include a puppet named Madame Defarge and a Seinfeldian assortment of apartment dwellers. Layered with a huge moral compass and enormous humanity, this portrait of a family one-fifth simian will, nevertheless, touch and delight every human * Boston Globe * Hinges upon Rosemary's sharp voice, which at its best includes funny, self-aware asides such as an early reference to a character at a holiday dinner where she flippantly advises the reader, "Don't get attached to him; he's not really part of this story * LA Times * We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves is that rare thing, a comic novel that wrestles seriously with serious moral questions ... Fowler knows how to make her story funny and sad and disturbing and revelatory by erecting a space in which her reader is allowed to feel all of that for herself * Salon * So thought provoking on the topic of animal rights that it could alter your future decisions as a consumer. I don't want to say much about the plot of the book ... except to compare it to Ann Patchett's State of Wonder in terms of weaving a larger story of radical, scientific experimentation into a very personal woman's narrative * MSN * Rosemary's voice is achingly memorable, and Fowler's intelligent discourse on science vs. compassion reshapes the traditional family novel into something more universally relevant... This brave, bold, shattering novel reminds us what it means to be human, in the best and worst sense * Miami Herald * Halfway through Karen Joy Fowler's enthralling novel "We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves," I was sort of beside myself, too, with that electric thrill of discovering a great book. I wanted to stay up all night to finish it, but I also wanted to stop and call all my book-loving friends immediately and blurt, "You have to read this book!" * Cleveland Plain Dealer * [A]n unsettling, emotionally complex story that plumbs the mystery of our strange relationship with the animal kingdom - relatives included -- Ron Charles * Washington Post * Karen Joy Fowler has written the book she's always had in her to write. With all the quiet strangeness of her amazing Sarah Canary, and all the breezy wit and skill of her beloved Jane Austen Book Club, and a new, urgent gravity, she has told the story of an American family. An unusual family-but aren't all families unusual? A very American, an only-in-America family-and yet an everywhere family, whose children, parents, siblings, love one another very much, and damage one another badly. Does the love survive the damage? Will human beings survive the damage they do to the world they love so much? This is a strong, deep, sweet novel -- Ursula K Le Guin It's been years since I've felt so passionate about a book. When I finished at 3 a.m., I wept, then I woke up the next morning, reread the ending, and cried all over again -- Ruth Ozeki Are we animals, or are we something else? This is the urgent question ever roiling beneath the surface in Karen Fowler's alarming tale of a family's rude awakening to the true meaning of the word "primal." Reading We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves is both a delight and a provocation. I turned the last page nearly breathless with admiration -- Valerie Martin One of the greatest pleasures I take in reading is being able to hand over the books that thrill me, which this summer would be Karen Joy Fowler's We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves -- Ann Patchett * Wall Street Journal * A gripping and surreptitiously intelligent book about a family's falling apart after a young daughter is sent away. Who - or what - the young daughter is can't be discussed without revealing a major spoiler, suffice it to say it is a whopper. The book is far deeper and more ambitious, however, than its central conceit would lead one to think -- Khaled Hosseini, from the Khaled Hosseini Foundation newsletter Intelligent and forces the reader to question what we owe our fellow creatures -- Elizabeth George This surreptitiously smart novel's big reveal slyly recalls a tabloid headline * New York Times Notable Books 2013 * Spectacular, deep, zingy ... Simultaneously a high-speed antic and an absolutely essential meditation on nothing less than what it means to be a good person ... I gasped aloud and put this book down more than once, filled with ache and worry for the characters; I laughed aloud several times; and when it was done, the big questions it raised about kindness, empathy, and cruelty lingered with me and show no signs of fading. It's one thing to write a deep book. It's another altogether to write a deep book that clips along like a pop song, one that periodically skewers you on events and questions that pin you to the world and demand that you confront things that we've all carefully avoided for most of our lives. -- Cory Doctorow * Boing Boing * One of the best twists in years makes this novel unique, captivating and so moving it will stay with you for a long time. * Stylist * If you're anything like me, you'll finish this novel with tears in your eyes and want to turn right back to the beginning. Wonderful. * DIVA * We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves is a captivating novel with a twist unlike anything you'll ever have read before, and it will break your heart in two. * Stylist * This smart, funny, moving novel. * Marie Claire * This novel is weighty, yet written with a lightness of touch that is more effective than any agitprop. It charts a profound philosophic journey, mixing wit with scientific rigour. The result might be Fowler's most important work yet. * Sydney Morning Herald * A moving portrait of an American family that raises questions and feelings you never knew you had - about humanity, psychology and love in all its forms. It is a masterful novel, painful and memorable, and, like all the best novels, it will stay with you long afterwards. * Psychologies * The kind of book you'll want all your friends to read too so you have other people to talk to about it... By turns funny, surprising and heartbreaking, this tale of middle-class dysfunction is unlike any I've read before. -- Katie Grant * Stylist Magazine * Karen Joy Fowler holds the reader's hand firmly, using expert storytelling to reveal Just enough, a little ata time, while raising the big questions about family, ethics and love. * Australian Women's Weekly * Rosemary's voice is honest and believable and utterly compelling. This is a character that makes you stay up all night listening to her telling her story to you; one who feels like a living breathing person who you are sad to say goodbye to at the end... We are all completely beside ourselves is a beautifully written, compelling story of family, love and loyalty that shows us who we are and what makes us human. -- Julie Fisher * Bookmunch * Rosemary's voice hooked me in, making it impossible to put down this thought-provoking, moving and entertaining novel. -- Fanny Blake * Woman & Home * This amazing and sad-yet-witty story begins in the middle and goes back to the start twice - with a huge twist along the way. * Company * Delivers and unforgettable "I didn't see that coming!" moment.... this tear-jerking story of a family like no other. * Good Housekeeping * Karen Joy Fowler's smart, witty take on what constitutes a family, and the part the individual ingredients play in the whole, is a beautifully skewed look at domestic relationships. -- John Harding * Daily Mail * very good indeed... nothing less than a full-on exploration of what makes human beings human. * Reader's Digest * At heart, a poignant and thought-provoking story about a child's love for her sister. * Image Magazine * Anyone with an interest in animals - human or otherwise - will love this book. -- Henry Nicholls * Guardian Online * We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves is a heartbreaker of a novel. It's about memories and the tricks they play on us; the way we revise and repress them, their power and unreliability, their play on the present. It's about the nature of family and love, the arrogance and wonder of humanity and how far we'll go in the quest for knowledge; it's about being different....I found it sizzling with smarts and very funny but at the same time deeply tragic. You'd need to have a hard heart not to feel it shattering as piece by piece Rosemary puts together the events that have defined her life * NZ Herald * There have been many books written about sibling love and rivalry but few, I'm sure, can rend the heart and bore beneath the skin quite like this one... prepare to be charmed and traumatised. -- Carol Midgley * THe Times * Fowler has that ability, present in a great deal of American writers' work, to ease you into a family situation and make you feel as if you'd known every single member personally for years. And it's with such ease that she also asks the important questions, about how and why we love one another, what happens when that love is taken away, and what responsibility we have once we instil and respond to love... an irresistible, if often distressing, read. -- Lesley McDowell * Independent on Sunday * There is a deep well of sadness at the core of We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves, an awareness of the wreckage left by psychologists and animal behaviorists. Yet it's a mark of the intelligence Fowler brings to bear on her subject that this sadness never overwhelms this ferociously smart, woundedly funny and deeply moving novel. For as it eloquently reminds us, we are all mysteries to ourselves, made and unmade by our pasts. * Sydney Morning Herald * A novel that is both one giant moral compass and a harrowing depiction of a family's implosion, the prose of which zings on the pages... deserves to be acclaimed for the right reasons. -- Lucy Scholes * Observer * Wholly engrossing tale of an estranged family... Fowler's breezy prose is alive with funny, pointed observations but also dreamily melancholic with the underlying sense of loss, and does full justice to this unique tale... a heart-breaking, heartening read, asking complex, disturbing questions with a witty elegance. -- Eithne Farry * Sunday Express * We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves is an unsentimental but profoundly compassionate and deeply moral look at what it means to be human and how people treat creatures who are different to them... If ever there was a popular novel - or at least, one that deserves to be - that blends comedy and tragedy, this is it. -- Tina Jackson * Metro * Many a novel has devoted itself to exploring variations of Larkin's lament about what mums and dads do to their kids. But if any other book has done it as exhilaratingly as the achingly funny, deeply serious heart-breaker that is Fowler's 10th novel, and made it ring true for the whole of mankind, I've yet to read it. This is a moral comedy to shout about from the treetops. -- Liz Jensen * The Guardian * A beautifully written, compelling story, peopled with quirky, memorable characters, an engaging and moving tale recounted by a wonderful, original, witty narrator... when I turned the final page, I pined for that quirky voice, shaping how I look at the world. My first impulse was to start right back at page one, to savour the beautiful writing, the witty asides, the lucid prose. The next was to tell everyone I know to read it. -- Justine Carbery * Sunday Independent (Ireland) * Utterly beguiling... combines a precise Austenian sensitivity to emotional nuance with the discomforted perception of a narrator who feels herself an alien... has an unforgettable, tender ferocity. -- Jane Shilling * New Statesman * The novel is weighty, yet written with a lightness of touch that is more effective than any agitprop. It charts a profound philosophic journey, mixing wit with scientific rigour. The result might be Fowler's most important work yet * The Sunday Age, Australia * A thoughtful, well-crafted novel * Sunday Times *
About the Author
Karen Joy Fowler is the author of six novels and three short story collections. The Jane Austen Book Club spent thirteen weeks on the New York Times bestsellers list and was a New York Times Notable Book.
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3.9 out of 5 stars
3.9 out of 5
4,652 global ratings
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TOP 1000 REVIEWER
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We are all aware of animal testing in laboratories and how cruel the experiments are. The dysfunctional parents in this book made me very angry. To put a baby chimpanzee into a human family - a "twin" for their own baby girl - and then discard the animal as soon as it became too much to handle and got dangerous was disgusting. It is well documented that this happens as these animals mature. They can NEVER be "human" no matter how they are raised and it is appallingly unfair to the animal as well as the people they eventually attack. I didn't enjoy this book, I felt uncomfortable and sad throughout, especially when the chimp killed the kitten. Obviously, the main character and her brother were deeply affected by the whole experience, something which the father seemed to discard as of no account. No, I'm sorry I read it.
One person found this helpful
Helpful
Reviewed in Australia on 28 September 2015
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I downloaded this book for our book club meeting, and it was a book that produced very lively, intense discussion and mixed reviews. When I read the book, I could appreciate the writing skills of Fowler, but struggled to complete the book, as for me (a passionate animal lover who has strong views on animal rights), the subject matter was quite distressing. I was appalled that Fern was discarded with so little effort made by the family to ensure her welfare and well- being were paramount. I am aware that large animals were used extensively for experimentation in America, but to treat Fern as part of the family, and then discard her reduced me to tears.
However, as I read on and did complete the book, the storyline brought home to me what a dysfunctional family this was. All the family in the end were psychologically damaged by the removal of Fern, especially the narrator and her brother. By the time I completed the book, I could not decide who was the most deserving of compassion.
The most interesting part of reading the book for me were the factual extracts at the end. I learnt quite a lot about how difficult it is for chimpanzees and gorillas to adjust once they are removed from a human based environment. The fact that so few live for more than a couple of years after their removal is very telling indeed. I can't say I enjoyed the book, but it has had an enormous impact upon me, and has stayed in my mind - a credit to the power of Fowler's writing.
However, as I read on and did complete the book, the storyline brought home to me what a dysfunctional family this was. All the family in the end were psychologically damaged by the removal of Fern, especially the narrator and her brother. By the time I completed the book, I could not decide who was the most deserving of compassion.
The most interesting part of reading the book for me were the factual extracts at the end. I learnt quite a lot about how difficult it is for chimpanzees and gorillas to adjust once they are removed from a human based environment. The fact that so few live for more than a couple of years after their removal is very telling indeed. I can't say I enjoyed the book, but it has had an enormous impact upon me, and has stayed in my mind - a credit to the power of Fowler's writing.
3 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in Australia on 21 November 2014
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I really wanted to like this book, and to begin with I did. Little Rosemary's voice was the saving grace, before she became aware of the dynamics of her life. I thought the "reveal" was cheap. I didn't enjoy Rosemary as an adult, and she was the most 3 dimensional of all the characters. The underlying message about animal testing and research was not lost on me but as I did with Ruth Ozeki's My Year of Meats I found the vehicle for it underwhelming.
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in Australia on 29 December 2015
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This book started off quite slowly, but I got to a certain point and couldn’t put it down.
I had heard nothing of the book until it was put forward for our book club as recommended reading. There was a short synopsis that gave nothing of the plot away and I started reading with no preconceptions.
I loved the writing style. The author has a witty sense of humour. She wrote in layers, and the story jumped seamlessly back and forth in time without being confusing. It was very skilfully crafted.
I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a well written cleverly woven tale. I would not recommend it to my parents, and anyone of their advanced years (mid 80’s). I would recommend it to anyone who enjoys psychology and what makes us tick, and the imperfections of our memory/mind. Because it’s a slow start, I wouldn’t recommend it to someone who gets impatient, or anyone who enjoys easy reading.
The lovely thing about e-readers is you can get a sample and if you don’t like it, no harm done. Just hope they give you a decent wack of the book, enough for you to get past the slow start.
I had heard nothing of the book until it was put forward for our book club as recommended reading. There was a short synopsis that gave nothing of the plot away and I started reading with no preconceptions.
I loved the writing style. The author has a witty sense of humour. She wrote in layers, and the story jumped seamlessly back and forth in time without being confusing. It was very skilfully crafted.
I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a well written cleverly woven tale. I would not recommend it to my parents, and anyone of their advanced years (mid 80’s). I would recommend it to anyone who enjoys psychology and what makes us tick, and the imperfections of our memory/mind. Because it’s a slow start, I wouldn’t recommend it to someone who gets impatient, or anyone who enjoys easy reading.
The lovely thing about e-readers is you can get a sample and if you don’t like it, no harm done. Just hope they give you a decent wack of the book, enough for you to get past the slow start.
Reviewed in Australia on 24 November 2014
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The book became arduous to finish. It seemed schizophrenic, in that the author didn't seem clear as to whether her subject matter was American college life in the 1990's, animal welfare or a dysfunctional family that gave scant thought to how raising an animal as a family member, may affect their own vulnerable biological children. It tended to childish and cavalier, and then pompous and over bearing about animal rights. The brother, who featured so large in the sisters mind and therefore in the book, was very invisible. It was difficult to discern if he was an unhinged, psychotic and obsessive man, or a genuine fighter for animal rights. I could continue. I could not recommend the book to adults. Maybe it's target is teenagers.
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Reviewed in Australia on 29 May 2016
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I had no idea going into this book what it was actually about but it only took a few pages to be totally absorbed. The book starts out like a series of overflowing thoughts from an inquisitive, intelligent, busy child's mind. It's funny, clever and often poignant. Gradually though, the story becomes more serious as the weight of the truth of the story unfolds along with all its implications on the relationships of the characters. Beautifully written, entertaining and carrying an important message on how we treat our fellow beings, human or otherwise. A highly recommended read.
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Reviewed in Australia on 28 January 2016
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I loved the idea of the story, but the book wasn't as enjoyable to read as I wished. The story itself is absorbing, but the writing a bit convoluted. Not a bad book, but not one of my favourites, even though the premise is good.
In parts it's not a pleasant read, but that's probably not the point of it either. I ended up thinking it was worth the read, but don't need to read it again.
In parts it's not a pleasant read, but that's probably not the point of it either. I ended up thinking it was worth the read, but don't need to read it again.
Reviewed in Australia on 23 October 2014
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Joy fowler has written a most surprising narrative of family life. I found the first half extremely amusing and enjoyed it thoroughly. However, once the dynamics of the family had been exposed, the fun seemed to go out of it. This does not mean it was not an intelligent view of a most unusual family, but rather a sad reminder of difference. All cannot be revealed here without spoiling the book for those who wish to read it.
I do recommend this book for those of us who are interested in all things human or otherwise.
I do recommend this book for those of us who are interested in all things human or otherwise.
Top reviews from other countries

Ecowitch
3.0 out of 5 stars
I kind of feel like I should have enjoyed this more
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 3 March 2017Verified Purchase
I kind of feel like I should have enjoyed this more, particularly given the reviews it has gotten, but it didn't quite hit the spot for me. I enjoyed the style of writing and found it flowed well and at first I found the story really engrossing, not to mention the massive twist with regard to Rosemary's sister Fern. But after about three quarters of the way through I found myself losing interest a little. The story was still good but there was a bit of a sense that it was beginning to drag on a little bit. This could well just be me and I would still recommend it, just temper your expectations a little, maybe.
18 people found this helpful
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R. L. Simpson
4.0 out of 5 stars
A really good novel, that it's almost impossible to review without a spoiler ... but I'll try
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 February 2016Verified Purchase
I really liked this book, but it's hard to review without making a massive spoiler! Given the centrality of the family secret to the plot, it's impressive how long Fowler masks this from the reader. When you get there, there is an "OK, that makes sense moment", and then the story plays out well - in my view - beyond that.
The novel is based on the real experience of a number of American families, and I then wanted to learn about that history, so I read ... Well, I can't tell you, without the spoiler! So, only look this up if you've read the novel and want to read more about its theme, but I recommend the work of Roger Fouts.
"We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves" has a style that not everyone will enjoy - it feels like a young adult's narration, quirky, and a bit jerky too. That worked for me, as the narrator is a young adult whose life have been disrupted, and is trying to find some balance. I found it easy to read, and it ultimately made me really think about humanity, family, and other related subjects.
The novel is based on the real experience of a number of American families, and I then wanted to learn about that history, so I read ... Well, I can't tell you, without the spoiler! So, only look this up if you've read the novel and want to read more about its theme, but I recommend the work of Roger Fouts.
"We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves" has a style that not everyone will enjoy - it feels like a young adult's narration, quirky, and a bit jerky too. That worked for me, as the narrator is a young adult whose life have been disrupted, and is trying to find some balance. I found it easy to read, and it ultimately made me really think about humanity, family, and other related subjects.
14 people found this helpful
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Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars
A very unsettling read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 27 November 2019Verified Purchase
I'm not good at writing reviews, but feel compelled to do so with this book. It is so well researched about a subject many of us have little insight into and we must know more about it we are to become more humane in our attitudes towards other members of the animal kingdom. I'm of an age where it was good fun, as children, to watch (baby) chimps tea parties at the zoo or on television without any sensitivity or understanding of their own needs. Most young people today will be horrified to discover what used to go on, and probably still does, to some extent, in most parts of the world. All the way through this book, I have wondered if this is actually an account of a real life experience. Not that it matters either way, because it's the message conveyed which is crucial. Humans aren't the be all and end all and we forget that at our peril!
2 people found this helpful
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Kate
2.0 out of 5 stars
Was that it?
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 27 January 2018Verified Purchase
I really wanted to enjoy it - well written with so much promise. But I felt the way the story was told hyped it up to something it wasn’t - I was left feeling ‘Was that it?’ - both at the point of the ‘twist’ and at the end. It lacked a story line that I was constantly waiting to discover - perhaps this book would have worked better for me if it was based on a true story, then it might have worked as a window into the storyteller’s life and you’d forgive it for not having the beginning, middle and end it kept going on about.
6 people found this helpful
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Mondoro
4.0 out of 5 stars
Quirky and disturbing
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 May 2015Verified Purchase
A book definitely out of the mainstream that starts out as a conventional rite of passage told by an adult looking back on her childhood in the typical American family, with siblings, parents and grandparents. One is jerked out of this narrative by the 'twist' which has been highlighted as the main feature of the book, and which cannot be revealed as it acts as a significant spoiler. From this point onwards, the story proceeds in a more and more disturbing fashion, with the loss of siblings and the fragmentation of the family.
The author has created several memorable characters including the narrator, Rosemary, who is both endearing and irritating at the same time; her brother Lowell, idealistic and very driven; her self- introduced friend Harlow, certainly flaky, but evoking our sympathy; her mother, who struggles with depression; and her father, whose truly unpleasant character is revealed very early in the story.
I found this very disturbing book, and not just in its references to the way human beings have treated our primate brothers and sisters as merely experimental animals. It says much about modern family relationships, and the pressures that young people face in a world that is becoming more and more threatening. Karen Joy Fowler writes fluently, creating a fairytale world of the very young in counterpoint to the harsh reality of adolescent/early adult life.
The author has created several memorable characters including the narrator, Rosemary, who is both endearing and irritating at the same time; her brother Lowell, idealistic and very driven; her self- introduced friend Harlow, certainly flaky, but evoking our sympathy; her mother, who struggles with depression; and her father, whose truly unpleasant character is revealed very early in the story.
I found this very disturbing book, and not just in its references to the way human beings have treated our primate brothers and sisters as merely experimental animals. It says much about modern family relationships, and the pressures that young people face in a world that is becoming more and more threatening. Karen Joy Fowler writes fluently, creating a fairytale world of the very young in counterpoint to the harsh reality of adolescent/early adult life.
6 people found this helpful
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