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My Nemesis

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From the acclaimed author of Miss Burma, longlisted for the National Book Award and the Women's Prize for Fiction, comes an immersive and searing story of two women, their marriages, and the rivalry between them

Tessa is a successful writer who develops a friendship, first by correspondence and then in person, with Charlie, a ruggedly handsome philosopher and scholar based in Los Angeles. Sparks fly as they exchange ideas about Camus and masculine desire, and their intellectual connection promises more—but there are obstacles to this burgeoning relationship.

While Tessa's husband Milton enjoys Charlie's company on his visits to the East Coast, Charlie's wife Wah is a different case, and she proves to be both adversary and conundrum to Tessa. Wah's traditional femininity and subservience to her husband strike Tessa as weaknesses, and she scoffs at the sacrifices Wah makes as adoptive mother to a Burmese girl, Htet, once homeless on the streets of Kuala Lumpur. But Wah has a kind of power too, especially over Charlie, and the conflict between the two women leads to a martini-fueled declaration by Tessa that Wah is "an insult to womankind." As Tessa is forced to deal with the consequences of her outburst and considers how much she is limited by her own perceptions, she wonders if Wah is really as weak as she has seemed, or if she might have a different kind of strength altogether.

Compassionate and thought-provoking, My Nemesis is a brilliant story of seduction, envy, and the ways we publicly define and privately deceive ourselves today.

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    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2022

      Though they are both married, Tessa bonds instantly with charismatic philosopher Charlie but has issues with Charlie's wife, the biracial Asian Wah (Tessa is white, and it is implied that Charlie is as well). Tessa finds Wah so unbearably subservient to both Charlie and their adoptive Burmese daughter that in one alcohol-overwrought moment she calls Wah "an insult to womankind." Now she must look beyond her easy assumptions and examine her own motives. From the author of the National Book Award long-listed Miss Burma.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 24, 2022
      Craig (Miss Burma) offers a swift and cutting examination of a rivalry between two women. Two middle-aged married couples meet for dinner in Los Angeles. On one side of the table is Wah, a mixed-race Asian woman who published a book about Htet, the 15-year-old Burmese girl she adopted with Charlie, her husband of 20 years. On the other is Tessa, a successful white memoirist from New York in her second marriage to Milton, who sees Wah as dependent and insecure and, believing herself to be a feminist, tells Wah she’s “an insult to womankind.” Tessa finds Charlie, on the other hand, intellectually and emotionally attractive, and later gets him to confide that he’d struggled to support Wah’s decision to adopt Htet. Milton also enjoys Charlie’s company, though Tessa’s flirtation with Charlie exposes the cracks in her marriage. Later, the three discuss a failed film adaptation of Wah’s book, which was scrapped after the studio couldn’t find a South Asian woman to direct (“My point is that we’re heading dangerously toward a kind of segregationism in the name of morality,” says Charlie). The writing is biting and propulsive as allegiances shift and Tessa realizes she’s misjudged Wah. This confident work is sure to spark conversations. Agent: Ellen Levine; Trident Media.

    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2022
      An emotional affair toxically intertwines the lives of two families. After writing a book about Camus, Tessa receives a letter from Charlie, a philosophy professor, and the two begin an intense correspondence. Milton, Tessa's second husband, also strikes up a friendship with Charlie, but Tessa increasingly finds herself at odds with Charlie's wife, Wah. Wah is an accomplished lecturer and writer and is also quite devoted to the couple's 15-year-old adopted daughter, Htet, who was a victim of child trafficking in Malaysia (and about whom she has written a book). This dedication contrasts with Tessa's more distant approach with her own daughter, Nora. Nine months into the couples' friendship, Tessa accuses Wah, whom she sees as weak, of being "an insult to womankind," a blow from which neither couple, nor their friendships, can recover, and which ultimately forces Tessa and Charlie to reckon with the pain their relationship has caused their spouses. Craig has crafted an intense portrayal of an intellectual affair as well as a private competition between two women with perfectly balanced moments of tension and introspection. The relationship between Tessa and Charlie deeply depends on their conversations about Camus and Nietzsche, whom they reference heavily to work through their own attitudes toward each other and the world. Yet as distant and self-assured as Tessa is, Craig never lets her first-person narrator off the hook, as she must acknowledge her own role in the disintegration of every meaningful relationship she has. Cerebral and tense.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from November 1, 2022
      The complicated relationship between memoirist Tessa and professor and philosopher Charlie becomes an entry to a layered exploration of the perception of the self and the outside world. Craig (Miss Burma, 2017) is masterful in her use of her characters' preoccupations with Camus and Nietzsche and their detailed conversations analyzing their attitudes to life, love, and relationships to create a framework for Tess' troubled marriage to Milton and interactions with their daughter, Nora, as well as Tess' deeply challenging relationship with Charlie's wife, Wah. The story of Wah's adoptive daughter, Htet, ensures that this is not only a novel about cerebral connections and armchair analysis. A simple plot summary cannot capture the depth of Craig's treatment of such big themes as femininity and masculinity, motherhood and fatherhood, friendship and love. Wah and Tessa, in their mutual if undefined distrust and discomfort, are juxtaposed against each other for much of the book but in a way that undercuts reductionist assumptions. Craig offers an effective inquiry into the elusive nature of intimate relationships, whether they stem from love or hate.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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