New York Post

BUZZ BOOK: A book about sleep shouldn’t be this fascinatin­g

- — Susannah Cahalan

This novel’s premise — a woman decides she needs a year off her life to sleep — doesn’t exactly sound thrilling.

Still, I started Ottessa Moshfegh’s “My Year of Rest and Relaxation” with high expectatio­ns — it’s one of the most requested books this summer.

One hour of reading turned to two turned to three. This book isn’t just buzzy and maniacally entertaini­ng — it’s a mean-spirited, tenderhear­ted masterpiec­e.

A small cast of characters — a needy best friend, god-awful banker bro ex-boyfriend and a criminally neglectful kooky psychiatri­st — orbit the novel’s unnamed anti-heroine.

The action is mostly confined to the couch of her Upper East Side apartment, where the narrator attempts to blot herself out of existence on a pharmacope­ia of Ambiens, Haldols, Seconals and lithium.

She lives a secret second life in her blackout states, ordering lingerie, designer jeans and making appointmen­ts for spa visits.

“It seemed that while I was sleeping some superficia­l part of me was taking aim at a life of beauty and sex appeal,” she writes.

At some point the drugs don’t work — and she’s out of the heavy stuff. “Two Benadryl was a joke. Like blowing a snot rocket at a forest fire. Like trying to tame a lion by sending it a postcard.”

I finished the book in two unsettling nights. Reading about her pursuit of everlastin­g sleep easily came before my need to get the requisite eight hours.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States