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Lungfish

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Longlisted for The Center for Fiction 2022 First Novel Prize Tuck is slow to understand the circumstances that have driven her family to an uninhabited island off the coast of Maine, the former home of her deceased grandmother where she once spent her childhood summers. Squatting there now, she must care for her spirited young daughter and scrape together enough money to leave before winter arrives-or before they are found out. Relying on the island for sustenance and answers-bladderwrack, rosehips, tenacious little green crabs; smells held by the damp walls of the house, field guides and religious texts, a failed invention left behind by her missing father-Tuck lives moment-by-moment through the absurdity, beauty, paranoia, and hunger that shoots through her life, as her husband struggles to detox. Exquisitely written and formally daring, Lungfish tells the story of a woman grappling through the lies she has been told-and those she has told herself-to arrive at the truth of who she is and where she must go. Meghan Gilliss's debut is a brilliant and heartbreaking novel about addiction, doubt, marriage, motherhood, and learning to see in the dark.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 16, 2022
      Gilliss debuts with a pungent and riveting story set on a tiny, isolated Maine island. After Tuck’s grandmother dies, the family’s island house is left to her father, but he’s been missing ever since Tuck was in high school. Tuck’s family desperately needs a change from their “strange, failed home” in Pittsburgh, so she surreptitiously moves to the island with her husband, Paul, and her young daughter, Agnes. Once they arrive, Paul, who is addicted to kratom, an opioid herbal extract, goes through an excruciating detox. When he’s mobile, money disappears; when he isn’t, there isn’t enough food or gas, and the mainland is only accessible by boat. In memorable sequences, Tuck and Agnes forage for sustenance, stretching their diets over the summer to accommodate little more than seaweed and mussels (when Tuck throws a starfish back in the water, Agnes screams in hunger). Tuck also makes a bit of money by designing and printing comical bumper stickers, which she sells on the mainland. As she puts off telling the pesky executor about her father’s long-ago disappearance, she wonders if the family could make a go of it through the winter. Gilliss shines with a lyrical style and bold, fragmented structure, as Tuck’s frequent meditations on lungfish, which can go without food for three years and survive in “the hardest place, the intertidal zone,” contrast with her own predicament. Indeed, Tuck’s resilience makes her an indelible creation. Out of a tangible sense of desperation, Gilliss produces a triumph.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Devon Sorvari gives a stunning performance of this timely and powerfully affecting audiobook about a young family in dire circumstances. Tuck; her husband, Paul; and their young daughter, Agnes, squat in her late grandmother's home on a remote Maine island, which has been willed to Tuck's long absent father. The family's meager funds are being depleted by Paul, who is addicted to an herbal opiate, and the family receives little help from social services. Sorvari wonderfully mines the resilience and bravery of the one-of-a-kind Tuck, who forages for seaweed to feed her daughter as she struggles to keep her family going. Sorvari imbues the novel's precise and poetic language with emotion and urgency, creating a hypnotic listening experience. This provocative and harrowing audiobook is essential listening. M.J. © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine
    • Library Journal

      Starred review from February 1, 2023

      Gilliss's haunting debut, narrated with restraint and precision by Devon Sorvari, follows Tuck, Paul, and their daughter Agnes as they leave their disintegrating life in Pittsburgh for the tenuous safety of a remote island off the coast of Maine. There, they squat in Tuck's grandmother's house which has been inherited by Tuck's unreliable and now absent father. Tuck's situation becomes more dire when she discovers that Paul is addicted to kratom, an herb with opioid-like effects. Without money, resources, or help, as Paul is locked in a seemingly unending cycle of bitterness and withdrawal, Tuck turns to the sea for survival, harvesting seaweed, tiny blue crabs, mushrooms, and mussels, which she and Agnes ration between themselves. Sorvari grimly describes Tuck's desperate circumstances, conveying her initial state of shock with a distant, numb tone. But as Tuck discovers more about Paul's troubles and misdeeds, Sorvari brings her anger to the surface, and it grows into a thrumming force. Sorvari's masterly performance honors the poetic cadence of Gilliss's words, and her pacing--delicate, yet insistent--is exquisite. VERDICT Enhanced by Sorvari's luminous narration, this piercing portrait of a woman pared down to her essence is unforgettable.--Sarah Hashimoto

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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