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zilver 's review for:

Last Night in Montreal by Emily St. John Mandel
4.0

"She was unmoored and her memories were eroding in the sunlight, and she was rendered shy by the strangeness of this new fast life."

i'm a bit in two minds about whether it would've been better to read emily st. john mandel's books in order, but i actually think i can appreciate this earlier work more having read some of the later stuff.

this book is the start of the ESJMLU (emily st. john mandel literary universe) and it shows. there are so many themes and motifs here that we see her return to again in station eleven and the glass hotel. the traveling protagonists, the dipping our toes into the mystical parts of the world, the importance of cities and homes. it's really cool to recognise these things as things she is interested in exploring in her work, and it's extra fascinating to see how she's grown and developed when it comes to telling these stories.

there are a number of things that are slightly underdeveloped or unresolved in this novel in a way that i think glass hotel-emily st john mandel wouldn't let them be. but i think precisely because i know where she is heading, those things don't bother me that much. i'm sad i didn't get more than a couple of glimpses of some elements, but at the same time she's already so good at setting up this open world that it isn't hard to imagine the developments yourself, if you want.

i also think it's funny that it's in this first book there is a line that encapsulates her recognisable style so well: "This was a skittish, almost catastrophic life, in which nothing was certain; paradoxically, Lilia was unusually calm." i like having it so explicitly said here, knowing the way her later work will spark that feeling so naturally.

"How much loss can be carried in a single human frame?"

and despite it's flaws, there are so many things here already - in earlier shapes and forms, sure, but here nonetheless - that draw me to mandel's stories. the mysteries she sets up and guides you through. you never feel like you know too much or too little - even if you want to know more you trust that she knows how she will get you there. and she does. it's a very comforting feeling.

3/5 books read. i'm living a good life working my way through emily st. john mandel's bibliography.