In a Perfect World
By Laura Kasischke
HarperCollins
October 2009
309pp
Here’s the blurb from the publisher:
This is the way the world ends…
It was a fairy tale come true when Mark Dorn—handsome pilot, widower, tragic father of three—chose Jiselle to be his wife. The other flight attendants were jealous: She could quit now, leaving behind the million daily irritations of the job. (Since the outbreak of the Phoenix flu, passengers had become even more difficult and nervous, and a life of constant travel had grown harder.) She could move into Mark Dorn’s precious log cabin and help him raise his three beautiful children.
But fairy tales aren’t like marriage. Or motherhood. With Mark almost always gone, Jiselle finds herself alone, and lonely. She suspects that Mark’s daughters hate her. And the Phoenix flu, which Jiselle had thought of as a passing hysteria (when she had thought of it at all), well . . . it turns out that the Phoenix flu will change everything for Jiselle, for her new family, and for the life she thought she had chosen.
The Short of It:
This is not a feel-good book. It’s a bit dark, and often times depressing, yet there is beauty between its pages and I found its simplicity oddly comforting.
The Rest of It:
The first third of this book is spent setting up the characters. Jiselle starts off as sort of one-dimensional. She falls in love with Mark Dorn and eventually quits her job to care for his three children. As a pilot, he is rarely home and as an ex-flight attendant, Jiselle is well aware of how such a career works. However, she becomes frustrated by his long absences and spends a lot of her time remembering how it used to be. In the mean time, the Phoenix Flu has hit. Celebrities are dropping like flies and panic has set in. To top it all off, Mark is detained and unable to return home so Jiselle is suddenly a single-parent.
The end of the world as we know it, is a scary thing to ponder. If you’ve ever experienced a natural disaster first-hand, you can sort of appreciate, on a smaller scale, the kind of chaos that is possible. For example, when I was in the big Northridge Quake…it did not occur to me that gasoline would be scarce. I mean, there are pumps everywhere, right? True, but when there is no electricity those pumps don’t work. Nor do ATMs or credit card machines, so if you’re without cash when the big one hits, then you’re up the creek without a paddle.
This book is sort of like that. Kasischke reminds you that food is scarce, that gasoline is at a premium and that medication is a luxury. As you follow along, you realize just how precious that torn scrap of paper is, or that empty plastic bag. As the characters are slowly stripped of their possessions, what remains is a simplicity…a quietness that is somehow comforting. A simple meal, a game of charades, conversation by candlelight…these are things we typically do not appreciate in the fast-paced world we live in today.
What I found particularly shocking was the author’s use of actual celebrities within the storyline. This put a 2009 “stamp” on it and made it all the more real. Additionally, the pandemic storyline strikes a little too close to home. In the book, the Phoenix flu loosely resembles the Avian flu but with H1N1 raging all around us, its hard not consider the similarities.
Reading about the end of the world is not pleasant and Kasischke does not paint a pretty picture but the novel is very thought-provoking and there are moments of quiet beauty. I found it to be very visual in the telling. A book club would have a lot to discuss.
Source: This review copy was provided by HarperCollins in conjunction with Book Club Girl.
Great review. I thought the show was very interesting!
That seems so depressing to me! I know there are tons of books like this out there but I’ve managed not to read any of them. I always wonder about books that are dated with current popculture, how do they hold up later? I’m reading a book from 1994 (?) right now and someone has a cellphone and it is clearly unusual to have one.
I know!! I was surprised to see real names in there but the author said that if she didn’t use them, then she would have used a fictionalized world and she didn’t want to do that. I wonder how those celebs would feel if they knew of their demise.
Great review… It sounds gloomy and yet good. I am glad you reviewed it for us… I won’t be reading it this month but maybe in the spring. I love when a book is date stamped with current info. I find that revelation about the book a lure to read. Thank you Ti!
I listened to the show last night (even though I haven’t read the book) and got the feeling that this is a dark book. It sounds like one that really makes you think.
It does sound like a depressing book, but you wrote an amazing review that still makes me want to read it. Thank Ti.
For some reason, I find these end of the world books intriguing. I’ve not been through an earthquake, but in 2004 I survived not one but three direct hits from very destructive hurricanes. No power for almost two weeks, no gasoline…we lived off the food that was melting in our freezer. Thank God for propane grills! You learn very quickly how to make do. I’m going to have to chase this book down!
Great review! I was on the fence with this book, but you’re review prompted me to add it to my to-read list. I like dark and depressing books, though I might wait until all the swine flu stuff has calmed. LOL
–Anna
Nice review Ti. This book does sound intriguing but I`m so paranoid about pandemics as it is that I`m not sure I could read it. Maybe one of these days but not right now.
I kind of skimmed your review because I just got this to read in 2010 and don’t want to “spoil” it for myself but it has caught my eye a few times.