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Fiction

Too everything

You Gotta Have Balls by Lily Brett

by Ilana Snyder
November 2005, no. 276

You Gotta Have Balls by Lily Brett

Picador, $32.95 pb, 293 pp

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Ruth Rothwax is back. The star of Lily Brett’s Too Many Men (2000) is still running a successful letter-writing business in New York City, but she’s branched out into greeting cards. Her father, Edek, with whom she made the trip to Poland in the earlier novel, has moved from Melbourne to New York to be near her. At the heart of the novel is the fraught, yet fond, relationship between them.

Despite many years in therapy and the restorative aspects of the visit to Poland, the Holocaust and its legacy continue to shape Ruth and help explain at least some of her lingering neuroses. When her friend Sonia, whom Ruth thinks must be one of the few women in New York who doesn’t have a food disorder, asks why she doesn’t eat properly, Ruth replies: ‘I can’t eat red meat. I associate it with burning flesh.’

 


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You Gotta Have Balls by Lily Brett

Picador, $32.95 pb, 293 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


From the New Issue

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by Anthony Macris

Walking Sydney: Sydney, by its writers by Belinda Castles

by Phillipa McGuinness

What Is Wrong with Men by Jessa Crispin & The Male Complaint by Simon James Copland

by Tom Ryan

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