Synopsis:
On the afternoon of October 12, 1990, my twin brother,
Thomas, entered the Three Rivers, Connecticut, public library, retreated to one
of the rear study carrels, and prayed to God the sacrifice he was about to
commit would be deemed acceptable. . . .
One of the most acclaimed novels of our time, Wally Lamb's I
Know This Much Is True is a story of alienation and connection, devastation and
renewal, at once joyous, heartbreaking, poignant, mystical, and powerfully,
profoundly human.
Woah. This book is heavy. It touches on so many rough
topics. Let’s take a quick look at some of those:
Mental Disorders
Mental and Physical Abuse
Incest
Homophobia
Suicide
Rape
Death
And that isn’t even all of them. This is one of the most
complete novels that I have read in a long time, and it better be since it was
almost 900 pages long. I won’t lie -- the length was intimidating. It made me
put off reading this book for a few months, but once I actually opened it up to
give it a shot, I was hooked.
We can start with Dominick, the main protagonist. The POV
character of the book. Straight up, Dominick is an asshole. So many times
throughout the duration of the book, I just wanted to smack him for how he
talked to people and how he treated them or thought about them. But the more
you read, the more his personality starts to make sense. It doesn’t excuse his
behavior, but he makes sense and you can begin to feel bad for him and relate
to him at times. Dom didn’t have an easy life by any means. By the end you just
want things to be okay for him.
Thomas was just a tragic character in this story. From the
very first page until the very last. The whole time, I wanted to just grab
Thomas and hug him and never let go. I wanted to protect him like Dominick
tried to. Getting the short end of the
stick in every situation. Being Dom’s twin, he was always the black sheep
brother. The one that everyone liked less, and then he had to have life deal
him another blow with schizophrenia. Thomas’s life just wasn’t fair. From the
way he was treated as a kid by his own family and the other kids to the way he
was handled by the folks at Hatch, the end of Thomas’s story came as no
surprise.
Ray could be considered one of the antagonists in the novel,
aside from life itself. Ray was a piece of work, and chapters that included him
in the early years were so painful to read at times, but the book wouldn’t have
been complete without him. Seeing bits and pieces of his softer side really
humanized him, but just like Dom, I couldn’t let go of all of the bad things he
had done.
Dom and Thomas’s Mother was an interesting character because
the only time we meet her is in flashbacks. Her role in the story contributed
so much to how both Dominick and Thomas grew up. If you are into ‘Nature vs.
Nurture’ there is an interesting argument to be had about this family. A set of
twins that are completely different, yet they are raised by the same parents.
The parents treat the boys different, but does turn them into who they became?
I would like to hear other opinions on this topic.
Domenico, the grandfather. The mysterious man. We only hear
about him until Dominick gets his memoir back in a weird twist of fate. I will
admit, most of the chapters that included his memoir dragged on for me. I
skipped half of one entirely because I was bored. Some of them were really
intense and attention grabbing though. Reading through his writing, you can see
where Dominick gets his temperament and part of his personality. Domenico was
1000x worse though. He also came from a different time and from a different
situation. Just like Ray, some of his story was so hard to read. He was a
terrible man, but he thought so highly of himself.
Shaeffer was. . . and interesting part of the story. I
really liked her character but I also couldn’t exactly figure her out. I feel
like there was a deeper side to her that we never really got to explore. I
would have liked to know more about her, but this book was already super long.
Dr. Patel is a fantastic character in this story. Dominick
needed her more than anything because she wouldn’t put up with his nonsense.
She wouldn’t let him lie to himself anymore or hide from things he needed to
face. I enjoyed her personality and almost wish there was a book series with
her as the protagonist.
Dessa – This book wouldn’t have been anything without Dessa’s
character. She isn’t actually present for most of the novel, but a lot of the
book revolves around the relationship that Dominick and Dessa had. Her
character forced his character to be deeper and more developed in a lot of
ways.
Leo the classic jokester best friend with a soft side. He is
an interesting guy and helped Dominick get through a lot of things in life
whether it was from being a supportive friend or by being a jerk and it just
happened to work out.
Ralph is like that background character that you see in
movies that turns out to play a major role in the story. It seemed that Ralph
was around for almost every major event that Dominick had to face. Towards the
end you can figure out why that seems to be.
I think everyone needs to read this book to discover a
little more about themselves. It will challenge you, it will make you cringe,
laugh, cry, scream, and want to tear the book in half. But it will also keep
you reading until the very end, and that is what is so beautiful about it. It
is an extremely well written novel, and I feel like I am better for having read
it.
5/5 Stars despite the length and a few slow parts.
Memorable Quotes: “I couldn’t do it. Poured that little
cascade of capsules down the sink instead of down my throat. Turned the water
on and washed away my big suicide.”
“Our being human made us tragic and comic both, she had
said: the gods both laughed and wept.”
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