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An Earthquake is A Shaking of the Surface of the Earth
An Earthquake is A Shaking of the Surface of the Earth: A Novel | Anna Moschovakis
1 post | 1 read | 1 to read
A formidable, uncanny, and utterly unique new work from accomplished novelist and poet, Anna Moschovakis, whose translation of David Diop’s Frêre d’âme (At Night All Blood Is Black, Pushkin and FSG) won the 2021 International Booker Prize In An Earthquake Is a Shaking of the Surface of the Earth, an unnamed narrator struggles to regain the ability to walk after a sudden seismic event has rendered unpredictable shifts and undulations in the ground. Convinced of a need to find and kill her younger housemate, Tala, who has disappeared, the narrator struggles physically and psychically to contend with her homicidal task in the wake of failure as a Method actor. The narrator travels back in time and out into a dust-covered, shadowy city, where she is targeted by charismatic “healing” ideologues with uncertain motives. Torn between a paranoid suspicion of internalized, toxic language, and a desperate attempt to find stability and feel something like whole, she is forced to question familiar figurations of light, shadow, authenticity, and voice, taking tentative steps toward a new understanding of self and world.
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Gleefulreader
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Mehso-so

I had expectations of this book going in based on many indie bookstores including it in their year end round up, but I didn‘t love it. Perhaps a lot of the symbolism and meaning went over my head, but I just couldn‘t understand the main characters reasoning for fixating on killing her former roommate and how that related to the unknown continuous movement/earthquakes that have occurred. I finished the book confused.