Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn

As anyone who has sat down to read an ancient literary epic will know, such works seldom lend themselves to being read quickly.  I mentioned in my last post that I was undertaking just such an endeavor, and although I did plan at the outset to read all four volumes back-to-back, I can now say with some certitude that doing so would probably make me lose all interest in what I was reading.  I don’t want to spoil my current reading project for you all yet, but in the interest of keeping my interest fresh, I have decided to take the volumes more slowly, and to break them up I have decided to follow up my May reading choice of Everything I Never Told You by the novel that may well have influenced it, Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl.

Gone Girl was originally published in 2012 and in 2014 a blockbuster thriller starring Ben Affleck, Rosamund Pike and Neil Patrick Harris was released (trailer here).  I knew I wanted to read the book the minute it came out, but since I am always buried in a pile of books as it is, I simply added it to my stack, and by some act of God have kept myself spoiler-free for the last five years.

Flynn’s novel tells the story of Nick and Amy Dunne, a couple whose seemingly idyllic life and marriage are shattered upon Amy’s disappearance over the Fourth of July holidays.  Nick’s unconcerned behavior in the first days of the investigation draws increasing suspicion from investigators, suspicion which is compounded by a mounting pile of evidence which seems to implicate Nick.  The novel seems headed towards a predictable husband-murders-wife conclusion when the first of several screeching plot twists occurs, jarring the reader into a page-turning thrill ride that literally does not stop until the very last page.

I do not want to say too much more about the plot of Gone lest I spoil it for any of you that have also shielded yourselves from the mass quantities of spoilers that filled the Internet after the book and film were released.  I will say, however, that upon reading Gone it became clear to me why the book had become such a smash hit.  From the rapid pacing to the changing perspectives between chapters, the novel is structured in a way that leaves the reader constantly theorizing as to what really happened to Amy, how and why.  The ending of the book left me mostly satisfied, although I did find some of Nick’s actions to be slightly questionable (feel free to let me know if you agree).

At any rate, although I may well be the only person on the planet who had not read Gone Girl by 2017, I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a good thriller, or more broadly to those who enjoy novels about the dark side of marriage.  I will definitely check out Flynn’s other works when I get the time, but for now I am weighing my options as to whether I am ready to dive back into my classical lit project just yet.

One thought on “Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn

  1. One of my favorite books of all time. I had never experienced an unreliable narrator, and I was absolutely RATTLED. I remember it as one of the first books that I read that felt truly dark, while also completely plausible (how far would you go to hurt those who hurt you first?) Now I want to reread it!

    (PS I am in 505 with you; glad you dropped this link in discussion!)

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