A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing

A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing
AuthorEimear McBride
Cover artistOleksandr Kovalchuk
LanguageEnglish
GenreNovel, stream of consciousness, Bildungsroman
Set inrural Ireland, 1980s/90s[1]
Published
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint
Pages227
Awards
ISBN1566893682
OCLC839315421
823.92
LC ClassPR6113 .C337

A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing is the debut novel of Eimear McBride published in 2013.

Content and style

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This stream of consciousness novel explores an Irish girl's relationship with her disabled brother, religious mother, and her own troubled sexuality.

Joshua Cohen described how McBride's experimental style "forgoes quotation marks and elides verbiage for sense, sound and sheer appearance on the page. For emphasis it occasionally wreaks havoc on capItals and reverses letter order."[2]

Genesis and publication

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McBride began writing her debut novel whilst working in a series of office temp jobs. It took nine years to find a publisher and was rejected by numerous companies. The book was eventually first published in 2013, with an initial print run of 1000 copies, by Galley Beggar Press of Norwich, England.[3] Mr Layte, of Galley Beggar Press recalled that the unusual writing-style led him to take up the novel where others had overlooked it:

I thought this was one of the most important books I had ever read. It had the same effect on me as when I first read Samuel Beckett. It was a game-changer as far as what could be done.[4]

In 2014, rights for a trade paperback were sold to publishers Faber and Faber.[5]

Reviews and prizes

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According to Book Marks, the book received "positive" reviews based on 12 critic reviews with 8 being "rave" and 2 being "positive" and 1 being "mixed" and 1 being "pan".[6] On Bookmarks Magazine Jan/Feb 2015 issue, a magazine that aggregates critic reviews of books, the book received a (4.0 out of 5) based on critic reviews with a critical summary saying, "The adventurous reader, however, will find ... a book that is not like any other" (Guardian)."[7]

In a New York Times review, Joshua Cohen described the book as being "in all respects, a heresy — which is to say, Lord above, it’s a future classic."[2] Reviewing the novel for The Guardian, Anne Enright wrote that it "is hard to read for the best reasons: everything about it is intense and difficult and hard-won."[8]

A New Yorker review by James Wood recounted the novel as "blazingly daring. . . . Eimear McBride prose is a visceral throb, and the sentences run meanings together to produce a kind of compression in which words, freed from the tedious march of sequence, seem to want to merge with one another, as paint and musical notes can. The results are thrilling, and also thrillingly efficient.”[9]

Kirkus Reviews states that the novel is "exhilarating fiction from a voice to watch."[10]

Adam Mars-Jones in his review for the London Review of Books described the work of Eimear McBride as "if every book was as intense as this, reading literature would be even more of a minority pursuit than it is already. A Girl Is a Half-Formed Thing makes that rapturous lament By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept look like Hotel du Lac. But then you wouldn’t want to go to Not I every night of the week."[11]

Annie Galvin for Los Angeles Review of Books stated that "to read the opening paragraph of Eimear McBride’s novel is to be radically disoriented. Sentence fragments pile up, and the familiar skeleton of the English sentence gets fractured, splintered into microscopic units (“You’ll soon.” “Bile for.”) that truncate without pointing in any obvious direction. The novel is many things: an elegy, a fever dream, a document of abuse, a distorted transposition of one consciousness into language. It is not clear; it is not easy. It takes effort to decode."[12]

NPR book reviewer Heller McAlpin advice to the readers is to "be prepared to be blown away by this raw, visceral, brutally intense neomodernist first novel. There's nothing easy about Eimear McBride's novel, from its fractured language to its shattering story of the young unnamed narrator's attempt to drown mental anguish with physical pain."[13]

The novel won several awards including the Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year,[14] the Goldsmiths Prize,[3] the Desmond Elliott Prize,[15] the Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction,[16] and the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize.[17]

The Guardian Book Club featured the novel in 2016, and the BBC Radio 4 Book Club featured the novel in early 2018.[18][19]

Adaptations

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In 2014, the novel was adapted for the stage by Annie Ryan. Initially appearing at the Corn Exchange, Dublin, the production later appeared at the Young Vic in London, the Traverse Theatre in Edinburgh, and the Baryshnikov Arts Center in New York.[20][21][22]

The Times Literary Supplement critic Davic Collard described the experience in his review as "When I saw the show again the following night it was, if anything, even more powerful. Like the novel, it has a momentous presence. Unlike the novel, the play is a collective experience."[23]

The audiobook of the novel, read by the author, was released in 2014.[24]

References

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  1. ^ Rustin, Susanna (16 May 2014). "Eimear McBride: 'I wanted to give the reader a very different experience'". The Guardian.
  2. ^ a b Cohen, Joshua (19 September 2014). "'A Girl Is a Half-Formed Thing,' by Eimear McBride". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
  3. ^ a b Maughan, Philip (13 November 2013). "Goldsmiths Prize awarded to debut novelist Eimear McBride for A Girl Is A Half-Formed Thing". New Statesman. Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  4. ^ Clark, Nick (6 July 2014). "Galley Beggar and Eimear McBride: The publisher that took a chance on". The Independent. Archived from the original on 11 September 2016. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
  5. ^ "A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing". Faber and Faber. Faber and Faber. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
  6. ^ "A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing". Book Marks. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  7. ^ "A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing". Bookmarks Magazine. Retrieved 14 January 2023.
  8. ^ Enright, Anne (20 September 2013). "A Girl Is a Half-Formed Thing by Eimear McBride – review". the Guardian. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
  9. ^ Wood, James (22 September 2014). "Useless Prayers – review". New Yorker. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  10. ^ "McBride's debut garnered the inaugural Goldsmiths Prize in 2013 and the Baileys Women's Prize for fiction in 2014—and...– review". Kirkus Reviews. 9 September 2014. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  11. ^ Mars-Jones, Adam (8 August 2013). "All your walkmans fizz in tune– review". London Review of Books. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  12. ^ Galvin, Annie (7 October 2014). "Nail Me Right Inside the Blackness– review". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
  13. ^ McAlpin, Heller (10 September 2014). "Challenging, Shattering 'Girl' Is No Half-Formed Thing– review". NPR. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
  14. ^ Doyle, Martin (28 May 2014). "Eimear McBride wins €15,000 Kerry Group Irish novel of the year award". Irish Times. Retrieved 3 September 2014.
  15. ^ "The 2014 Prize". The Desmond Elliott Prize. 3 July 2014. Archived from the original on 25 July 2014. Retrieved 21 July 2014.
  16. ^ Tim Masters (4 June 2014). "Eimear McBride wins Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction". BBC. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  17. ^ Beth Webb (21 November 2014). "Eimear McBride wins the 2013 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize". The Daily Telegraph.
  18. ^ "Book Club with Eimear McBride | The Guardian Members". The Guardian. The Guardian. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
  19. ^ "Bookclub - BBC Radio 4". BBC. BBC. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
  20. ^ "A Girl is a Half Formed Thing". Dublin Theatre Festival. 2014.
  21. ^ "A Girl Is A Half-Formed Thing, review: Majestic and mesmerising". Evening Standard. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
  22. ^ Brantley, Ben (22 April 2016). "Review: 'A Girl Is a Half-Formed Thing' Is a Ghostly Play". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
  23. ^ Collard, David. "Girl, interpreted". The TLS blog. Archived from the original on 28 March 2016. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  24. ^ Collard, David. "Girl, interpreted". The TLS blog. Archived from the original on 28 March 2016. Retrieved 23 January 2018.