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Fiction

Survival of the spitefullest

An idiosyncratic allegory
by Laura Elizabeth Woollett
October 2022, no. 447

Lapvona by Ottessa Moshfegh

Jonathan Cape, $32.99 hb, 304 pp

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

Ottessa Moshfegh (photograph by Krystal Griffiths/Penguin)
Ottessa Moshfegh (photograph by Krystal Griffiths/Penguin)

‘Lapvona dirt is good dirt,’ say the inhabitants of the titular medieval fiefdom in which Ottessa Moshfegh’s fourth novel, Lapvona, takes place. While the description refers to Lapvona’s rich soil, it could easily be an artistic statement. Moshfegh has long been an author concerned with physical and existential waste, and a vector for protagonists who alternately wallow in and renounce their own muck – from the virginal twenty-four-year-old narrator of Eileen (2015), who abuses laxatives and can’t bear to contemplate her own genitals, to the acerbic sleeping beauty at the heart of her most renowned work, My Year of Rest and Relaxation (2018), to Vesta Gul of Death in Her Hands (2020), a hermetic widow obsessively investigating an imaginary murder. The post-plague abjection of Lapvona is therefore fertile ground for Moshfegh to explore the horrors of embodiment that have previously defined her work.

 


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Lapvona by Ottessa Moshfegh

Jonathan Cape, $32.99 hb, 304 pp

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


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