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Bad Animals

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"[A] sharp-witted, ravishing novel." —Claire Luchette, New York Times Book Review

A sexy, propulsive novel that confronts the limits of empathy and the perils of appropriation through the eyes of a disgraced small-town librarian.

Now that her brilliant botanist daughter is off at college, buttoned-up Maeve Cosgrove loves her job at a quiet Maine public library more than anything. But when a teenager accuses Maeve—Maeve!—of spying on her romantic escapades in the mezzanine bathroom, she winds up laid off and humiliated. Stuck at home in a tailspin, Maeve cares for the mysterious plants in her daughter's greenhouse while obsessing over the clearly troubled girl at the source of the rumor. She hopes to have a powerful ally in her attempts to clear her name: her favorite author, Harrison Riddles, who has finally responded to her adoring letters and accepted an invitation to speak at the library.

Riddles, meanwhile, arrives in town with his own agenda. He announces a plan to write a novel about another young library patron, Sudanese refugee Willie, and enlists Maeve's help in convincing him to participate. Maeve wants to look out for Willie, but Riddles's charisma and the sheen of literary glory he promises are difficult to resist. A scheme to get her job back draws Maeve further into Riddles's universe—where shocking questions about sex, morality, and the purpose of literature threaten to upend her orderly life.

A writer of "savage compassion" (Salvatore Scibona, author of The Volunteer), Sarah Braunstein constructs a shrewd, page-turning caper that explores one woman's search for agency and ultimate reckoning with the kind of animal she is.

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    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2023

      Laid off after being accused by a teenager of spying on her trysts in the mezzanine bathroom, Maine public librarian Maeve Cosgrove is struggling to clear her name when she learns that Harrison Riddles, an author she admires, has agreed to her request to speak at the library. He also wants her help in writing a novel about a young Sudanese refugee who frequents the library. From the National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 Braunstein, whose The Sweet Relief of Missing Children was short-listed for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 15, 2024
      The propulsive if uneven latest from Braunstein (The Sweet Relief of Missing Children) concerns a disgraced small-town Maine librarian’s chance at redemption. When middle-aged Maeve is accused by a troubled teen named Libby of spying while Libby has sex in the library bathroom, she denies the charges, but still loses her job. Adding to her heartache, she learns her daughter is not coming home from college for the summer. Things start to look up, though, after esteemed author Harrison Riddles agrees to visit the library while vacationing nearby with his wife. Maeve is a big fan of Riddles and had tried for years to secure an appearance, so it’s a big deal for her when a mutual friend invites her to dinner with the author. Riddles recruits Maeve to help with research on his next novel, and with both of their spouses conveniently out of town, she starts sleeping with the writer. Meanwhile, Maeve also hopes to convince Libby to rescind the accusations. Though the narrative loses steam over the course of Maeve and Riddles’s repeated trysts and the conclusion is easy to predict, Braunstein makes Maeve’s emotions palpable as she attempts to clear her name and deal with her empty nester woes. This has plenty of charm.

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2024
      A library worker is accused of voyeurism in Braunstein's pulsing second novel (The Sweet Relief of Missing Children, 2011). When Maeve Cosgrove is laid off, she blames Libby, a troubled teenager who claimed Maeve watched her fool around with a boy in the public library restroom. Maeve's resentment grows after famed author Harrison Riddles agrees to speak at the library, a program she had been working to book for months. With her husband away on a work trip and her daughter spending summer break elsewhere, Maeve feels like the world is against her. "Everything's gone at once," she complains to a friend. Desperate to feel needed, she jumps at the chance to assist Riddles with his next novel, based on the life of local Sudanese refugee Willie. Simmering with rage and desire, she is determined to get what she wants, regardless of the consequences. Exploring themes of appropriation, obsession, and control, Braunstein's tangled novel will leave readers unsettled.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2024
      A small-town Maine librarian gets into a peck of trouble. Plot #1: Maeve Cosgrove is called to her supervisor's office, where a woman from the Office of Family and Child Services has come to talk to her. One of the library's regular visitors, a teen named Libby, has filed a complaint: Maeve has been watching her have sex with a boy in one of the library's bathroom stalls. The girl is in foster care, and the boy is developmentally delayed, and Maeve insists it didn't happen, but eventually it seems it more or less did, sort of. Maeve might be let off the hook, but if she wasn't obsessed with the girl before, she certainly is now, and then she loses her job anyway, supposedly due to budget cuts. Welcome to Plot #2: Maeve has been writing letters to Harrison Riddles, a famous author who summers in Maine. She's told him all about her beloved library and co-workers. Now, it turns out, he's going to write a book based on the life of Willie, a Sudanese refugee who's the boyfriend of Maeve's fellow librarian Katrina. Since Maeve's husband is perennially out of town on business and her daughter has flown the nest, Maeve, now jobless, is available to get very tangled up in this other situation. It takes a while to sink in that she is not an easy person to root for, but once it does, it complicates an already overcomplicated book, which touches on everything from abuse and empathy to literary appropriation, ventriloquizing, and the idea of the Magical Negro. A few chapters are narrated in first person by the characters, and toward the end the book floats the idea that it's been authored by a real-life Maeve, hiding her secrets "in plain sight," and then a strange last chapter suggests--well, you'll have to figure it out. Full of ideas, plot, verve, interesting scenes, and good writing, but just a little too full. A writer to watch.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      December 13, 2024

      National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 awardee Braunstein (The Sweet Relief of Missing Children) has written a bookish book, with its small-town Maine library setting and a librarian embroiled in a scandal that turns obsessive, weird, and utterly unpredictable. Readers interested in complex heroines will find Maeve Cosgrove's response, after a teenager makes allegations against her, to be edgy, elusive, vulnerable, and compellingly real, especially as she reckons with her own values, identity, and agency. When a celebrated author intervenes, seemingly at first on Maeve's behalf, to salvage her reputation and her library job, the narrative ventures into a bleak archive of conspiracies, sure to prompt intense book club conversations. The novel touches on sex, morality, and literature in ways that draw attention to bigger questions of politics, all without ever losing sight of the plot and the woman at its center. VERDICT A fast-paced novel that integrates elements of mystery, social critique, and literature in ways that will make readers question what their own inner narratives say about the stories they tell about themselves and others. Fans of Sulari Gentill's The Woman in the Library will find this mesmerizing novel just twisty enough to keep them guessing.--Emily Bowles

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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