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The Mandibles: A Family, 2029-2047
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The Mandibles: A Family, 2029-2047
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The Mandibles: A Family, 2029-2047
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The Mandibles: A Family, 2029-2047

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this ebook

From Lionel Shriver, the acclaimed author of the National Book Award finalist So Much for That and the international bestseller We Need to Talk About Kevin, comes a striking new novel about family, money, and global economic crisis.

The year is 2029, and nothing is as it should be. The very essence of American life, the dollar, is under attack. In a coordinated move by the rest of the world’s governments, the dollar loses all its value. The American President declares that the States will default on all its loans--prices skyrocket, currency becomes essentially worthless, and we watch one family struggle to survive through it all.

The Mandibles can count on their inheritance no longer, and each member must come to terms with this in their own way-from the elegant ex-pat author Nollie, in her middle age, returning to the U.S. from Paris after many years abroad, to her precocious teenage nephew Willing, who is the only one to actually understand the crisis, to the brilliant Georgetown economics professor Lowell, who watches his whole vision of the world disintegrate before his eyes.

As ever, in her new novel, Shriver draws larger than life characters who illuminate this complicated, ever-changing world. One of our sharpest observers of human nature, Shriver challenges us to think long and hard about the society we live in and what, ultimately, we hold most dear.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateJun 21, 2016
ISBN9781443434058
Author

Lionel Shriver

Although Lionel Shriver has published many novels, a collection of essays, and a column in the Spectator since 2017, and her journalism has been featured in publications including the Guardian, the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal, she in no way wishes for the inclusion of this information to imply that she is more “intelligent” or “accomplished” than anyone else. The outdated meritocracy of intellectual achievement has made her a bestselling author multiple times and accorded her awards, including the Orange Prize, but she accepts that all of these accidental accolades are basically meaningless. She lives in Portugal and Brooklyn, New York.

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Reviews for The Mandibles

Rating: 3.667567641081081 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

185 ratings17 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    After reading past reviews I agree that there is not much "new" in terms of ideas here, and yes, there is too much debate/discussion about economics, but I think reading this now, in 2018, feels scarier then it did pre-2016 election. It is pretty disturbing how much it feels like something like this plot could happen very soon, and it led to pointless discussions about what is valuable now, what could be valuable in a crisis (seriously - toilet paper!) and how one could possibly protect oneself form being wiped-out in a similar financial/social crisis!
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Read 70 pp too many.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This had a lot in common with my fave apocalypse novels – you could say this is an economic apocalypse novel, though it’s not a worldwide apocalypse, its effects being focused on one country (the USA), and like the best of them it doesn’t flinch from hard realities and harrowing events.To get to the drama you have to wade through the first part of the novel. Starting about ten years in the future, the social, political, economic and environmental circumstances need to be established, which means a lot of conversations in which characters debate the state of things, and children lecture their parents on economics, in ways that are not always believable but are nevertheless necessary if we are to put the events in context. It’s dense stuff, but there are gems to be unearthed (the passing reference to “Ed Balls’ government” raised a chuckle…. I was searching to see whether in this increasingly believable future, Brexit had actually happened, though if the answer was there I didn’t spot it).Maximum respect to Lionel Shriver, she has imagined a three-dimensional reality, complete with slang phrases, popular culture, technology, economics, the lot. It even comes with its own recent history (still the future for us). At one point the characters end up remarking how setting novels in the not-too-distant future means you don’t have to wait too long to find out if the vision was correct or not. Ironic and surely deliberate.Once the economic apocalypse hits – triggered by a decision by the USA to default on its increasingly unmanageable debt – the depiction of a society in gradual meltdown is compelling and frankly unputdownable. It’s one of those situations where just when you think things can’t possibly get any tougher, they do. There are people out there as I write “prepping” for the end of the world, or more immediately for Brexit, stockpiling coffee and baked beans and stuff like that. Having read this novel I’m thinking…. Man, if you really think there’s going to be a need for stockpiled goods, you don’t just need the goods you need a gun.There is an abrupt jump-shift towards the end of the novel, just when you least expect it, and though I felt a mite disappointed, things quickly ramped up again – Ms Shriver was not content with her apocalypse, she has also imagined what might come next, and ensure drama right up to the very last page. Good as her novels are, I feared she might never top “Kevin” but she just might have done here.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Too technical for me
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I was absolutely mad about this modern-day, black-humored GRAPES OF WRATH. It's 10 or so years in the future, and the dollar implodes, leading to a nationwide economic collapse. We follow one family's step-by-step decline into utter destitution, in the wider setting of New York City's descent into lawlessness. But trust me, it was no dystopian downer; it was funny and riveting. My five-star feelings only began to quaver after the portion set in the 2030's ended, when we fast-forward into what I initially thought was, and then thought SHOULD have been, a brief coda, set another decade or so into the future. The action only sagged here, in basically one scene, where the characters who were the teenagers during the collapse are now disaffected young adults unable to hold my interest. As this portion of the book went on, I was grossly disappointed - ending with the 2030's section was EXACTLY where it should have ended, I felt. BUT -- she did pull off a good enough ending to make the too-long coda worthwhile. So I stick with 5 stars.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I was reading this book in Sonoma, Ca while the worst fires in California history were raging. This dystopian novel about the descent into hell for the well to do was mirroring the realty of many people here that have lost everything in the fire. Fortunately, I am ok and was able to finish this terrific book. This is my first Shriver book though I am familiar with her work. Many of the reviewers have trouble with what they see as baby boomer and old people bashing along with attacks on the government. This is important to the novel. Basically in the year 2029 things have been tough in the US. Water shortage, a loss of the internet for 3 weeks in 2024 and myriad other problems plague us. Shriver takes most of the existing trends in our 2017 culture and extends them out in 2029: robots, driver less cars, increasing minority population. She does it in a creative satirical way that is both funny but also plausible. It is the plausibility of this book that makes it so interesting. In 2029 the non-american world gangs up on the dollar by creating a new currency call the bancor meant to displace the dollar. This group is led by Putin. Rather than work with the rest of the world our Mexican born president(Latins are the majority now) renounces all of our debts. This begins the descent. The story of the Mandibles is about an extended family that has been waiting for their inheritance from their 97 year old patriarch Douglas. The crisis renders this worthless and the rest of the book deals with how this mult-generational family copes and survives. An understanding of economics helps but is not necessary to enjoy this book. It is well written with wonderful prose and lots of humor. It really gets you thinking how you would survive in a world where the veneer of civilization has worn away and it is dog eat dog. Having seen the positive side of humanity during the our North Bay fires, I would hope that it would not end up like this novel. Again, this is a must read!!!!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is one of the scariest apocalyptic books I've ever read--because it's so real. It begins in 2029, which is pretty much like today, only worse, and grittier, and with a wider income gap. For the most part, the four generations of Mandibles are doing ok. Florence works at a homeless shelter and owns a house in an area of Brooklyn she hopes will soon gentrify. She lives with her boyfriend Esteban and her teenage son Will. Her sister Avery lives in DC, and is a psychotherapist married to Lowell, a prominent economics professor at Georgetown. They have three teenagers, who attend private schools are very entitled. They live a comfortable, even luxurious life. Florence and Avery's brother Jared owns an organic farm in upstate New York.The family patriarch, their grandfather Douglas, also known as "Grand Man", is extremely wealthy, and lives in a luxurious retirement community with his second, younger, trophy wife, who ironically suffers from dementia, in contrast to Douglas's robust health. Avery and Florence, as well as their parents (their father is Douglas's son) sometimes overtly, but mostly just in the back of their minds look forward to a time when they will inherit some of Douglas's fortune. Douglas also has a daughter in Paris. Aunt Nolly wrote one wildly successful book, and has apparently lived well off the proceeds ever since.Then, everyone's world turns on a dime. A consortium of nations has introduced a new currency, the bancor, and has replaced the dollar as the standard currency measure with the bancor. They announce that they will no longer accept payments in dollars. The President of the U.S. then declare all U.S. debts null and void, and also outlaws the bancor. The value of the dollar is immediately wiped out, and everyone loses whatever they have saved, large or small. In addition, all privately-held gold is confiscated by the U.S. government. Inflation runs rampant, with food prices being raised hourly.Shriver paints a real and extremely frightening picture of how our society would fall apart in such a financial cataclysm. The first part of the book covering this transition was totally spell-binding. The second part of the book, a number of years later, after the economy has become more stable, is less engaging, and becomes somewhat of a polemic. Evil big government has taken over--everyone must be "chipped" which allows the IRS to take its due from every cent anyone earns. Not surprisingly, some of our characters want to live free, and take off for Nevada, which has seceded from the union. I didn't care that much for the second part, although it still made for some interesting reading. But I can recommend this book for the first part alone.3 stars
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I'm a standard American liberal, so it was probably good for me to read something like "The Mandibles," which might be described as a dystopian novel written from a libertarian point of view. It's the sort of book that asks what would happen if many things that people on the left take for granted about America went wrong at the same time, from a failure of cultural integration to monetary policy to basic social order. But somehow, it's not always depressing. This one is, when one comes down to it, a satire, and at times it can be genuinely funny and not a little disquieting. You don't have to dislike left-leaning college professors and yoga-addled suburban moms to appreciate how well the author skewers them here. There are also some nice literary touches: Shriver anticipates not just how technology will change but how language will mutate over the next thirty years or so. "The Mandibles" includes future malaprops and slang. The book has something of a "voice" problem -- most of its characters speak in the same tart, excessively clever dialect that may or may not reflect the author's own speech patterns, but then, satires only have to be so realistic. The novel's central question really revolves around value, and not in the "what's really important" sense of the word. When a currency debases itself and everything, from food to shelter to water to basic safety becomes impossibly scarce, it moves a lot of the book's characters -- and perhaps the reader, too -- to ask themselves what really holds value and what doesn't. Shriver's very good at using the societal chaos described in this book to show what each of her characters takes for granted and how closely that ties into their financial condition. "The Mandibles" also asks what character traits, and, by extension, what characters, are best suited to survival when times get really tough. We see coddled characters find a toughness they never knew that they had, others make hard choices, and others fall apart completely. I especially enjoyed Willing Mandable, who's barely a teen when the trouble starts, and it's not that he's without kindness, but he has clear-eyed take on what it takes to survive and what's worth risking yourself for. He's an uncomfortable reminder that in some extreme situations it's the people who are willing to be most ruthless who are most likely to survive. The book sort of falls apart in its last few chapters, though. It's one thing to describe how people might deal with the collapse of a society more-or-less like ours -- an exercise which provides lots of opportunity for sharp satire -- and quite another to posit a mythical libertarian paradise. It's around here that the book finally starts feeling a bit like a sermon, and the fact that the author uses a really unfortunate metaphor to describe government surveillance doesn't really help matters. Even Willing Mandible becomes something of a vehicle for the author's version of one of those "I am an individual!" jags that Rand fans will probably appreciate. But even then, the books ends with the point that inequality is a part of the human condition and acceptance of inequality -- and the inevitable scarcity of resources -- is a necessary part of a truly stable society. I'll probably never agree with Ms. Shriver on a lot of political matters, but "The Mandibles" certainly gave me something to think about.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Fascinating dystopian novel following an American family in the near future. Financial meltdown, baby-boomers ageing, the withdrawal of cash, vividly described and scarily believable. Another intelligent, thought-provoking novel by Shriver.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    For the first time I can ever remember, this is the second book (from one library visit) that I failed to finish. In this novel I reached the half-way point before putting it down. It is well written, amusing (as a fall on a banana peel is funny), and unremittingly bleak. It posits an economic and political future in which the U.S. loses it's leadership role and enters an economic war with Russia and China. The results are a total loss of the social contract. Everyone (including the 1%) becomes poverty stricken over night. Inflation approaches Weimar levels. Crime skyrockets and becomes the norm; anyone retaining a home suddenly finds it swarming with homeless relatives. The use of water is too expensive for most people, as is electric power. So there's a two-century regression back to the early 19th century while the setting is Brooklyn in the middle of the 21st century in terms of technology, knowledge, etc. Eventually, I began to dread picking the book up to discover the next atrocity awaiting the family at the center of the tale. Shriver has created a never-ending joke. You get the set-up, and await the punchline, and it never comes. I recommend it, but only to strong, stoic readers who can put up with a work that is like a black hole.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Ugh! About the worst fiction I've read this year. Horribly written and unbelievable dialog. Thinly drawn characters. Awful. Stay away.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This novel is about the economic collapse of the US. The tone is very different from We Need To Talk About Kevin, less personally disastrous and more disaster in general. On the bright side, the son has been redeemed from the sociopathic Kevin to the practical, economic wiz Willing. Having a deeper understanding of economics would probably make it more meaningful, but it is eye-opening and engrossing. No political or economic system goes unscathed because Shriver has never shown herself to be partial to one specific guide to living. In this book, she leaves the reader just as angry as she did in Kevin but for different reasons. The US economy does collapse and one of the large causes is the amount of the economy that goes toward supporting old people. Lots of Boomer talk. Being a boomer, it's like getting slapped in the face over and over. Shriver is not a cuddle up by the fire kind of read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A bit pedantic at times, but her vision of the future and an economic collapse is not merely plausible, but chilling. It slows down a bit in the middle, but picks up again towards the end. It's very American in scope, which is a bit myopic at times, but parallels the political and economic dumpster fire down south, and I wish it had more about what might happen with Canada in it. Nonetheless, a good read.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Lionel Shriver is another favorite author of mine, and this book did not disappoint; it looks at what could happen if US currency loses its value worldwide, and some of its predictions hit a little close home in our current Covid world.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I have yet to work out why the two sentences, "I'd build a gigantic greenhouse. I'd grow lemons", caused me to burst into tears.

    A riveting, thought-provoking read; it's fiction, but it might not be.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book tells the tale of the economic collapse in the US in 2029. Cabbage is $20 a head. The robots were once called “bots” but they’ve taken over so many jobs, they’re now called “robs”. Showers are taken once a week to save water. There’s a new global currency, the “bancor”. The US President announces that the government is defaulting on all loans. Banks shut down and accounts are frozen. Inflation is out of control leading to chaos. The government demands that citizens turn over all gold to them. Unfortunately, this whole story is far too believable.Great Grand Man is 97 years old. The Mandible family (and there are a lot of family members) is waiting for him to die so they can inherit his sizeable fortune. But now not only has that fortune vanished, but they must struggle to survive. A new world is born and the author does a fabulous job of describing the changes. There is a truly chilling scene of the army coming into a home with metal detectors searching for hidden gold, with the threat of prison and a $250,000 fine should they find any. The book takes the family through to 2047 where what’s left of the family ends up in the United States of Nevada.This is written as a satire and with a dry wit. It’s a very clever book. I chose this book because I thought “We Need to Talk About Kevin” was such a powerful book so I was anxious to read her newest effort. This is a very different type of book. Although I’ve read reviews saying that the book is slow to start, I enjoyed the first quarter of the story very much but by the time I was half way through, I began to lose interest. I thought the book went on far too long and had made its point early on and the rest was just repetitive. The author does such an excellent job in detailing human reaction to these disturbing events that I wish she could have curbed some of the social commentary and long financial lessons that just seemed to bog the book down.This book was given to me by the publisher through Edelweiss in return for an honest review.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Part One was interesting, but difficult to get through. I could have done with more of Part Two. Overall, satisfyingly good.