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What It's Like in Words

A Novel

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

Eliza Moss's intoxicating debut novel is a dark, intense, and compelling account of what happens when a young woman falls in love with the wrong kind of man.

Enola is approaching 30 and everything feels like a lot. The boxes aren't ticked and she feels adrift in a way she thought she would have beaten by now. She wants to be a writer but can't finish a first draft; she romanticizes her childhood but won't speak to her mother; she has never been in a serious relationship but yearns to be one half of a couple that DIYs together at the weekends.
Enter: enigmatic writer. Enola falls in love and starts to dream about their perfect future: the wedding, the publishing deals, the house in Stoke Newington. But the reality is far from perfect. He's distant. But she's a Cool Girl, she doesn't need to hear from him every day. He hangs out with his ex. But she's a Cool Girl, she's not insecure. Is she? He has dark moods. But he's a creative, that's part of his 'process'. Her best friend begs her to end it, but Enola can't. She's a Cool Girl.
She might feel like she's going crazy at times, but she wants him. She needs him. She would die without him...That's what love is, isn't it? Over the next twenty-four hours (and two years), everything that Enola thinks she knows is about to unravel, and she has to think again about how she sees love, family, and friendship and—most importantly—herself.
With notes of Fleabag & I May Destroy You but with the sparseness and emotional accuracy of writers like Ali Smith and Lily King, What It's Like in Words is a close examination of what it means to experience the intense emotional uncertainty of first love.
A Macmillan Audio production from Henry Holt & Company.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 2, 2024
      Moss’s astute debut chronicles a London woman’s toxic relationship with an older man. Enola, 27, is a struggling writer working as a barista with her best friend, Ruth. She’s still processing her father’s death when she was a young girl and her decision to cut off communication with her mother. She meets the “mega-confident” B at a pub, where he props his feet up on the table next to her glass of wine. From then on, “the desire to please him bloomed like an addiction,” and he manipulates her with subtle insults and criticisms of her writing. Four months into the relationship and despite Ruth’s concerns, Enola takes a trip with B to Kenya, where she spent part of her childhood and where her father died. As memories of her dad resurface, Enola’s grief becomes too much for B and he breaks up with her, but it’s far from the end of their story. Over the next year and a half, Enola is constantly drawn back to B. Eventually, she must decide if she will move on from him and her troubled familial past or stay under his sway. While the novel’s structure is needlessly confusing, hopscotching across different periods of the relationship, Moss keenly portrays how Enola’s sense of self-worth becomes tied to B’s perception of her. It’s an arresting portrait of manipulation.

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  • English

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