Starling Days: A Novel

Starling Days: A Novel

by Rowan Hisayo Buchanan

Narrated by Sarah Borges

Unabridged — 10 hours, 14 minutes

Starling Days: A Novel

Starling Days: A Novel

by Rowan Hisayo Buchanan

Narrated by Sarah Borges

Unabridged — 10 hours, 14 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$18.55
(Not eligible for purchase using B&N Audiobooks Subscription credits)
$19.95 Save 7% Current price is $18.55, Original price is $19.95. You Save 7%.

Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers


Overview

The moving new novel by the author of Harmless Like You, a New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice and NPR Great Read

On their first date, Mina told Oscar that she was bisexual, vegetarian, and on meds. He married her anyhow. A challenge to be met. She had low days, sure, but manageable. But now, maybe not so much ... Mina is standing on the George Washington Bridge late at night, staring over the edge, when a patrol car drives up. She tries to convince the policeman she's not about to jump, but he doesn't believe her. Oscar is called to pick her up.

With the idea of leaving New York for London-a place for Mina “to learn the floor-plan of this sadness”-Oscar arranges a move. In London, Mina, a classicist, tries grappling with her mental health issues by making lists of women who survived: Penelope, Psyche, Leda, Iphigenia, but only in one of the tellings. Of things that make her happy: enamel coffee cups. But what else? She at last finds a beam of light in Phoebe, and friendship and attraction blossom until Oscar and Mina's complicated love is tested.

A gorgeously wrought novel, variously about love, mythology, mental illness, Japanese beer, and the times we need to seek out milder psychological climates, Rowan Hisayo Buchanan's Starling Days-written in exquisite prose rich with lightly ironic empathy-is a complex and compelling work of fiction by a singularly gifted young writer.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

02/24/2020

Buchanan (Harmless Like You) traces the strain of depression on a marriage in this bleak and eloquent novel. Six months after 32-year-old classicist Mina Umeda marries her boyfriend of 10 years, she walks pensively across the George Washington Bridge amid a depressive episode. Confronted by the police, she’s unable to convince them she was just clearing her head. Oscar, her Japanese-British husband, picks her up and suggests they go to London to distract her from her depression. There, she ruminates on an unfinished project about Greco-Roman myths titled The Women Who Survived. When Mina’s decision to go off her antidepressants and birth control exacerbates her illness, Oscar grows casually cruel in his frustration (“Nobody gets the life they thought they would”). He returns to New York City while Mina embarks on an affair with Phoebe, the sister of Oscar’s best friend. After Mina’s frantic fixation on Phoebe begins to push her away, Oscar returns to London and the married couple struggles forward. Buchanan sharply observes the confusing sensations of depression (“Sometimes I want to die and sometimes I want to buy a box of tomatoes and stand by the fridge eating them out of a paper carton”). Readers willing to brave the darkness will find a worthy, nuanced portrait of a woman’s struggle for self-determination amid mental illness. (Apr.)

Financial Times

The gifted Rowan Hisayo Buchanan follows her marvelous debut with Starling Days... portraying complex character and tangled interpersonal relations with striking maturity.

author of The Water Cure - Sophie Mackintosh

A quiet triumph—tenderly and disarmingly exploring the responsibility of love, loneliness, what it is to feel lost.

Ms. Magazine

Buchanan’s second novel tenderly explores mental illness, bisexuality, connection, love and loss. This is an original, poetic and striking literary triumph."

Buzzfeed

In this heartfelt book about a struggling young couple, Buchanan surfaces the many ways in which love can be complicated.

Entertainment Weekly

Everyone could use a change of scenery — and nobody more than Oscar and Mina, a married couple who leave New York for London after Mina's second suicide attempt. But a trek across the pond can't keep some old baggage away.

author of Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls - T. Kira Madden

Starling Days is unlike anything I’ve ever read. Both quiet and scorching, this is a story about mental health, desire, and the myriad mythologies we both build and destroy. Rowan Hisayo Buchanan has offered us another supreme gift of a novel, a rare opportunity to love and forgive our darkest and most shimmering selves.

Paris Review, most anticipated titles of 2020 - Spencer Quong

An exquisite rendering of love, sadness, and misunderstanding...I want to share this book with everyone I know.

author of America Is Not the Heart - Elaine Castillo

Starling Days a beautiful and profoundly moving “floor plan” of what it means to live with depression and dailiness, love and death, solitude and connection.

author of Ponti - Sharlene Teo

A singular novel from the poetic and painterly mind of Rowan Hisayo Buchanan.

From the Publisher

Readers willing to brave the darkness will find a worthy, nuanced portrait of a woman’s struggle for self-determination amid mental illness.”—Publisher's Weekly

“A gripping, tender, and unsettling look at mental illness... Poetic and understated, this nuanced work by Buchanan also addresses adult-child relationships, the legacy of family trauma, and the challenge of offering unconditional love...Complex and resonant.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

Starling Days is unlike anything I’ve ever read. Both quiet and scorching, this is a story about mental health, desire, and the myriad mythologies we both build and destroy. Rowan Hisayo Buchanan has offered us another supreme gift of a novel, a rare opportunity to love and forgive our darkest and most shimmering selves.”—T. Kira Madden, author of Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls

Starling Days a beautiful and profoundly moving “floor plan” of what it means to live with depression and dailiness, love and death, solitude and connection.”—Elaine Castillo, author of America Is Not the Heart

“A singular novel from the poetic and painterly mind of Rowan Hisayo Buchanan.”—Sharlene Teo, author of Ponti

“A quiet triumph—tenderly and disarmingly exploring the responsibility of love, loneliness, what it is to feel lost.”—Sophie Mackintosh, author of The Water Cure

“The gifted Rowan Hisayo Buchanan follows her marvelous debut with Starling Days... portraying complex character and tangled interpersonal relations with striking maturity.”—Financial Times

“An exquisite rendering of love, sadness, and misunderstanding...I want to share this book with everyone I know.”—Spencer Quong, Paris Review, most anticipated titles of 2020

“Buchanan’s second novel tenderly explores mental illness, bisexuality, connection, love and loss. This is an original, poetic and striking literary triumph."—Ms. Magazine

“Everyone could use a change of scenery — and nobody more than Oscar and Mina, a married couple who leave New York for London after Mina's second suicide attempt. But a trek across the pond can't keep some old baggage away.”—Entertainment Weekly

“In this heartfelt book about a struggling young couple, Buchanan surfaces the many ways in which love can be complicated.”—Buzzfeed

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2020-01-13
Depression, like other psychiatric conditions, is often treated as a personal failure, a refusal to pull oneself together and do what's needed.

Oscar is at his wit's end. Although he and Mina have been together for 10 years, the deterioration of his wife's mental health has left him baffled. On the surface everything is fine: They finally married six months ago, and while Mina's academic career is floundering, he has a decent job working with his dad. What's more, they have a nice-enough Manhattan apartment and plenty of friends. Why, then, did Mina gulp a handful of pills on their wedding night? And why, barely six months later, did police remove her from a ledge on the George Washington Bridge? As Oscar grapples with his wife's ostensible death wish, he is offered a chance to work in London for a few months. Thinking that a change of scene will benefit Mina, the pair upend their lives, sublet their NYC apartment, and move. Not surprisingly, their troubles follow them across the Atlantic, and when Oscar is summoned back to the U.S. for an emergency business meeting, he is forced to leave Mina alone; although a phone app is supposed to track her movements, it doesn't. What follows is a gripping, tender, and unsettling look at mental illness. Mina's impulsiveness and obsessive behaviors, seemingly illogical, are sympathetically drawn. So, too, is Oscar's desire to run head-on into more stable surroundings, far from depressive disorders and suicidal ideation. Poetic and understated, this nuanced work by Buchanan (Harmless Like You, 2017) also addresses adult-child relationships, the legacy of family trauma, and the challenge of offering unconditional love.

Complex and resonant.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940177575858
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 07/07/2020
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews