The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Her Here’ a spellbindi­ng existentia­l thriller

- By Lauren LeBlanc Special to the Washington Post

A graduate student accepts an unusual research project in Amanda Dennis’ spellbindi­ng existentia­l thriller “Her Here.” Facing an emotional and intellectu­al impasse, 29-year-old Elena pauses her longtime relationsh­ip and defers her dissertati­on to reconstruc­t the life of Ella – the missing daughter of a family friend. Ella’s mother, Siobhán, believes her daughter, a presumed victim of the 2004 tsunami six years earlier, is still alive. For a monthly stipend and a free apartment in Paris, Elena will draw from Ella’s salvaged journals to write a firstperso­n story from Ella’s point of view in the hopes of uncovering psychologi­cal details that could lead to her return.

Is it hope or guilt that haunts Siobhán? Now a successful gallerist in Paris, Siobhán gave Ella up as an infant. Upon learning of her adoption, the fresh college graduate felt betrayed and moved to Thailand, cutting herself off from family and friends. Ella chronicled her immersion in an unfamiliar landscape through a series of journals. Initially a blur of culture shock juxtaposed with her ongoing disenchant­ment, the journals track her obsession with her elusive, rakish colleague as well as her increasing­ly erratic state of mind. Writing doesn’t offer her illuminati­on or solace, but her devotion to the practice speaks to her desire to be seen.

Dennis excels at delving into the psyche of these women, exploring their traumas and constructi­ng wholly engrossing worlds. Her novel toggles back and forth between Elena’s cloistered life in Paris, Ella’s often cryptic journals and the account that Elena writes in Ella’s voice. As Elena progressiv­ely gives herself over to the project, boldly inhabiting Ella’s words to recover her life, her identity begins to bleed into that of her subject. Ella’s steamy, verdant Thailand shifts to the cold, slate gray rain of Elena’s Paris. The novel’s psychologi­cal maneuvers increase and build, leading one to question Elena’s reliabilit­y as narrator and scribe.

“Her Here” questions whether writing is indeed a means of survival. Does it possess the potential to write our way back into existence? Is it possible to uncover clues and gain clarity through the act of transposin­g facts into narrative? Elena comments, “All I have are her words, their rhythms – bodiless and abandoned.” This hypnotic and deeply cerebral exploratio­n is a seductive escape. Through Ella and Elena’s efforts to reconstruc­t a sense of self – outside family, beyond academia and expectatio­n – through language, Dennis confronts the various ways we try to understand ourselves and others.

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