Need propels a heroine's long night of the soul.
Vlautin’s fiction is full of working-class strugglers doing their best to survive a rapidly changing country. Most of them, including the protagonists of his propulsive new novel, have been priced out of comfortable living, or even stability. And so they turn to unsavory means to get by. This book plays out like a modern noir take on a Tennessee Williams play, its desperate characters harboring old resentments, its hard-luck heroine settling scores throughout a long, bloody night in her hometown of Portland, Oregon. Thirty-year-old Lynette wants to buy the run-down rental house she shares with her embittered mother and her developmentally challenged brother. But she needs cash, especially after her mom’s most recent starburst of irresponsibility. She’s owed money around town, and it’s time to collect—and then some. Vlautin’s supporting characters—meth-heads and pimps, waitresses and mechanics—occupy a rung of society that rarely gets its story told in any kind of convincing way. His language is always vivid. Here’s Lynette studying a tweaker: “Bursting red blisters ran from the back of his neck, around his left ear, and completely engulfed his left eye and forehead. He was young, in his twenties, but his teeth had gone bad and his eyes looked pushed into his head like an old man’s.” Such is the company that Lynette comes to keep in her quest for an instant nest egg. Her nocturnal journey is gripping, but much of the book’s power derives from more quotidian questions: Can I get a loan to make that down payment on the house? Can I balance that introduction to econ class with my two jobs? Will my car start? And what happened to my city? “I’m realizing that the whole city is starting to haunt me,” Lynette tells a friend. “And all the new places, all the big new buildings, just remind me that I’m nothing, that I’m nobody.” Vlautin has written a soulful thriller for the age of soulless gentrification.
A working-class drama finds the grit beneath Portland's gentrification.