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Scaffolding

A Novel

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
0 of 1 copy available
A novel of Paris, desire, love, psychoanalysis, and the turbulent affairs of two couples across time.
After a miscarriage and a breakdown, Anna, a psychoanalyst, finds herself unable to return to work, obsessing instead over a kitchen renovation and befriending a new neighbor—a younger woman called Clémentine who has just moved into the building and is part of a radical feminist collective.
Forty years earlier, in the same apartment, Florence and Henry are renovating their kitchen. Florence is finishing her degree in psychology and attending feminist meetings and Jacques Lacan's infamous seminars. She is hoping to conceive their first child, though Henry isn't sure he's ready for fatherhood.
Two couples in two separate but similar times—set against a backdrop of political disappointment and intellectual controversy—face the challenges of marriage, fidelity, and pregnancy. Lauren Elkin's Scaffolding is about the way our homes hold communal memories of all their inhabitants and their stories; about the bonds we create, and the difficulty of ever fully severing them; about the ways people we've loved live on in us.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 15, 2024
      Critic Elkin (Art Monsters) explores themes of change and desire in this stylish parallel narrative about two women who occupy the same Paris apartment decades apart. Anna, who’s dealing with depression following a miscarriage, stays in present-day Paris after her husband moves to London for a career opportunity. While considering Lacan’s theory of desire and reminiscing about past relationships, she meets Clémentine, a younger woman who has moved into the building with her boyfriend, and the two women become close. Their building is undergoing renovations, and Anna elects to update her kitchen, “a minefield of other people’s choices” that makes her feel like she’s “fighting with the past.” After a surprise encounter pushes Anna to a breaking point, Elkin shifts focus to another couple living in the apartment in the 1970s. The woman, Florence, who inherited the apartment from her grandmother and redesigned it (in the way Anna dislikes), is having an affair, and she, too, weighs Lacan’s theory while considering her choices. The links between Florence and Anna feel a bit forced, but there’s a great deal of depth and intelligence to the descriptions of their feelings around desire. Readers will find much to sink their teeth into. Agent: Sarah Chalfant, Wylie Agency.

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