Gone Girl (novel)
Author | Gillian Flynn |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Thriller |
Publisher | Crown Publishing Group |
Publication date
|
2012 |
Pages | 432 (first edition) |
ISBN | 978-0307588364 |
Gone Girl is a thriller novel by the writer Gillian Flynn. It was published by Crown Publishing Group in June 2012. The novel soon made the New York Times Best Seller list. The novel's suspense comes from the main character, Nick Dunne, and whether he is involved in the disappearance of his wife.
In several interviews, Flynn has said that she was interested in exploring the psychology and dynamics of a long-term relationship. In portraying her principal characters who are out-of-work writers, she made use of her own experience being laid off from her job as a writer for Entertainment Weekly.
Critics in the United States positively received and reviewed the novel. Reviewers praised the novel's use of unreliable narration, plot twists, and suspense.
A film adaptation, directed by David Fincher and written by Flynn, with Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike starring, was released on October 3, 2014. The film was met with both commercial success and widespread critical acclaim.
Contents
Plot summary
Gone Girl tells the story of Nick and Amy's marriage. The first part of the book talks about two different stories from Amy and Nick Dunne. In Amy's journals, she writes about her relationship with Nick in the past and Nick writes from the present. The two stories are not very alike. Amy's point of view on marriage makes her seem happier and easier to live with than how she is depicted by Nick, who describes her as anti-social and obsessed with perfection. Also, Amy's depiction makes Nick seem more aggressive than he says in his story.
Nick loses his job as a journalist and Amy loses her job as a magazine writer. The couple relocates to a small hometown in Missouri because Nick wanted to take care of his sick mother. He starts his own business by opening a bar using the last of Amy's trust fund and runs it with his sister. The bar allows the Dunne family to make a reasonable living, but the marriage takes a turn. Amy loved her life in New York and hates living in the house that Nick is renting.
On their wedding anniversary, Amy disappears without a trace. Over time, Nick becomes a suspect in her disappearance for many reasons. He used his wife's money to start a business, increased her insurance policy, and seems unemotional about her disappearance in public appearances. The police later find items that Nick had denied purchasing in the woodshed in the garden. It is revealed that Amy was pregnant. In a box found in the shed were 3 doll figurines, each of the dolls representing the wife, the husband, and a child. Nick feels like he needs to hire a lawyer, so he contacts Tanner Bolt. Tanner Bolt is a lawyer who specializes in defending men accused of killing their spouses.
In the second half of the book, the reader learns that the main characters are unreliable narrators, and that they are not being given all of the information. Nick is having an affair with one of his college students and Amy is alive and hiding. She is trying to frame Nick for her "death." Her diary is revealed to be fake, intended to implicate Nick to the police. Nick soon discovers that Amy is framing him but has no way of proving it.[1]
Together, Nick and Tanner Bolt work to change the public's perception of Nick. Nick discovers the truth about the people who supposedly harmed Amy in the past. According to their sides of the story, Amy had set them up for seeing other women or for not doing things the way she had wanted them to. Nick is granted an interview with Sharon. During the interview, he pretends to be apologetic and appeals to Amy to come back.
Amy is robbed by guests of a motel she was hiding in. Desperate, she gets help from her first boyfriend. He agrees to hide her, but Amy soon feels trapped in his house as he becomes possessive. After seeing the TV interview with Sharon, she is convinced that Nick really does want her back. She murders her first boyfriend and returns to her husband. She explains that she had been kidnapped and imprisoned by her former boyfriend. Nick knows she is a killer, and her pregnancy was a fake. He stays in the marriage because he has no proof of her crimes and deceptions. Amy forces him to lie about his love, hoping that he will love her the way she wants. She begins writing her memoirs, while Nick writes how he is still in love with her. Aware of her intentions to expose him, Amy then makes herself pregnant by using Nick's semen from the fertility clinic. She makes him delete his book by threatening to keep him from their unborn child. In the end, Nick chooses to stay with Amy for his child's sake.
Characters
- Amy Elliott Dunne: Raised in New York City, the only daughter of Marybeth and Rand Elliott, Amy is a perfectionist who experienced a privileged upbringing. She attended prep school and studied at Harvard, majoring in psychology. Growing up, her parents wrote a series based on her, called "Amazing Amy." She worked in New York City writing personality quizzes until she was laid off. She is married to Nick Dunne.[1]
- Nick Dunne: Raised in a working-class household with a misogynistic father who later suffered from Alzheimer's, a mother who later developed cancer, and a twin sister to whom he is close, Nick grew up as the golden child of the family, and held several jobs throughout his adolescence. He worked as a journalist in New York City.[1]
- Jim Gilpin: A detective who participated in Nick's investigation. He is described by Nick as having "fleshy bags under his eyes" and "scraggly white whiskers in his mustache."[1]
- Rhonda Boney: A detective who participated in Nick's investigation. She has a younger brother whom she "dotes on," and is the mother of a teenaged daughter, Mia.[1] She is described by Nick as "ugly," although he says he has an "affinity" for "ugly women."[1]
- Tanner Bolt: Nick's lawyer, a defense attorney who specializes in defending husbands accused of murdering their spouses.[1]
- Andie Hardy: The woman with whom Nick cheats on Amy. Andie met Nick as a student in his magazine writing class, and their affair began when she was 23 years old.[1]
- Margo ("Go") Dunne: Nick's twin sister, with whom he owns a bar and has a close relationship. She remains loyal to Nick throughout the murder investigation, despite her suspicions.[1]
- Desi Collings: Amy's boyfriend in high school, who is described as wealthy and obsessed with Amy. He is eventually murdered by Amy near the end of the novel.[1]
Composition and publication
Gillian Flynn is a former writer for Entertainment Weekly who wrote two popular novels prior to Gone Girl — Sharp Objects and Dark Places.[2] Gone Girl is her best selling book to date. Her other two books were about people incapable of making commitments, but in this novel she tried to depict the ultimate commitment, marriage: "I liked the idea of marriage told as a he-said, she-said story, and told by two narrators who were perhaps not to be trusted." Flynn has also described marriage as "the ultimate mystery."[3]
Flynn admits to putting some of herself in the character of Nick Dunne. Like Dunne, she was a popular culture writer. Also like Dunne, she was laid off after many years at the same job.[4] Flynn said, "I certainly wove that experience, that sense of having something that you were going to do for the rest of your life and seeing that possibility taken away... I definitely wove that sense of unrest and nervousness into Nick's character."[5]
Asked how she can write so believably about a man's inner life, Flynn says, "I'm kind of part guy myself." When she needs to understand something about how men think, she asks her husband or a male friend.[4] Flynn's autobiographical essay "I Was Not a Nice Little Girl..." invites readers to believe she took inspiration for Amy Dunne from her own interior monologue. In that essay, Flynn confesses to sadistic childhood impulses like "stunning ants and feeding them to spiders." A favorite indoor game called "Mean Aunt Rosie" allowed Flynn to cast herself as a "witchy caregiver" who exercised malevolent influence over her cousins. The same essay argues that women fail to acknowledge their own violent impulses and incorporate them into their personal narratives, though men tend to cherish stories of their childhood meanness.[6][7]
Flynn identified Zoë Heller's Notes on a Scandal and Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? as influences on her writing and, in particular, on the plot and themes of Gone Girl. Flynn said she admired the "ominous" ending of Notes on a Scandal and the pathology of a bad marriage from Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?. For the conclusion of Gone Girl, Flynn drew from Rosemary's Baby: "I love that it just ends with, you know, 'Hey, the devil's in the world, and guess what? Mom kind of likes him!'" she said.[8]
Flynn also says she is influenced by the mystery writers Laura Lippman, Karin Slaughter, George Pelecanos, Dennis Lehane, and Harlan Coben. However, she tries not to read any one genre exclusively, and she also admires Joyce Carol Oates, Margaret Atwood, T.C. Boyle, and Arthur Phillips, who are better known as realistic contemporary writers.[8]
Gone Girl is also the title of a Lew Archer story, in the 1955 collection The Name is Archer, by Ross Macdonald, whom Flynn has also cited as a favorite author.
Genre
Gone Girl is an example of mystery, suspense, and crime genres. A Reader's Digest review, for instance, notes that the book is "more than just a crime novel". The review goes on to describe Gone Girl as a "masterful psychological thriller" which offers "an astute and thought-provoking look into two complex personalities".[9] A Chicago Tribune review notes that Gone Girl uses many of the devices common to thrillers—a cast of viable suspects, unfolding secrets, and red herrings. However, the novel does more with these devices than the thriller genre requires: "While serving their usual functions, they also do much more, launching us into an unnerving dissection of the fallout of failed dreams."[10]
In her New York Times review, Janet Maslin also writes that the elements of Gone Girl that "sound like standard-issue crime story machinations" are not, because both narrators are also consummate liars and cannot be trusted to convey the truth about their own stories.[11] Salon.com writes that Gone Girl has literary features that enhance the crime genre features, adding that Flynn is "kicking the genre into high gear."[12] Flynn herself says that, in writing Gone Girl, she employed the mystery genre as a "thru-lane" to explore what she was really interested in: relationships.[4]
Themes
Gone Girl's themes include dishonesty, the devious media, and the unhappiness that comes with a troubled economy. The characters lie to each other and the reader about affairs and disappearances. Amy fabricates a fake diary to implicate her husband for her disappearance and murder. Flynn says that, in writing the book, she wanted to examine how people within a marriage lie to each other: "marriage is sort of like a long con, because you put on display your very best self during courtship, yet at the same time the person you marry is supposed to love you warts and all. But your spouse never sees those warts really until you get deeper into the marriage and let yourself unwind a bit."
An underlying theme is the brief undertone of feminism, most notably represented in Amy's 'Cool Girl' speech. For some, it is in this monologue that the otherwise despised Amazing Amy emerges as an unlikely heroine of sorts; flying the flag for women who refuse to succumb to the pressure to morph into the male's ideal.[13] Flynn is a self-identified feminist and has stated that Amy's "just pragmatically evil" character and non-conformity to the traditional perception of women as innately good characters are the embodiment of feminism, which she defined as "the ability to have women who are bad characters."[14]
Several reviews have also noted how well Gone Girl shows the tricky nature of media representation. Nick seems guilty due to media coverage before a trial occurs. Salon.com notes that "Flynn, a former staff writer for Entertainment Weekly, is especially good on the infiltration of the media into every aspect of the missing-person investigation, from Nick's cop-show-based awareness that the husband is always the primary suspect to a raving tabloid-TV Fury, who is out to avenge all wronged women and obviously patterned on Nancy Grace."[12] Entertainment writer Jeff Giles notes that the novel also plays on reader expectations that the husband will be the murderer, expectations that have also been shaped by the media, writing, "The first half of Gone Girl is a nimble, caustic riff on our Nancy Grace culture and the way in which 'The butler did it' has morphed into 'The husband did it.'"[15] A New York Daily News review also notes the novel's interest in how quickly a husband can be convicted in the media: "In a media society informed by Nancy Grace, when a wife goes missing, the husband murdered her. There’s no need for a body to arrive at a verdict."[16] A San Francisco Chronicle review also notes the book's recurring commentary on media influence: "Flynn pokes smart fun at cable news, our collective obsession with social media and reality TV."[17]
Flynn has also said that she wanted this novel to capture the sense of bankruptcy that both individuals and communities feel when the economy spirals. Not only have both her main characters lost their jobs, they have also moved to a town that is blighted by unsold houses and failed businesses. "I wanted the whole thing to feel bankrupt ... I wanted it to really feel like a marriage that had been hollowed out in a city that had been hollowed out and a country that was increasingly hollowed out," said Flynn.[5]
Reception
Gone Girl was #1 on the New York Times Hardcover Fiction Bestseller list for eight weeks.[18] It was also twenty-six weeks on National Public Radio's hardcover fiction bestseller list.[19] Culture writer Dave Itzkoff wrote that the novel was, excepting books in the Fifty Shades of Grey series, the biggest literary phenomenon of 2012. By the end of its first year in publication, Gone Girl had sold over two million copies in print and digital editions, according to the book's publisher.[18]
Gone Girl has been widely praised in numerous publications including the New Yorker, New York Times, Time, Publishers Weekly, Entertainment Weekly, Chatelaine, People Magazine, and USA Today. Reviewers express admiration for the novel's suspense, a plot twist involving an unreliable narrator, its psychological dimension, and its examination of a marriage that has become corrosive. Entertainment Weekly describes it as "an ingenious and viperish thriller."[15] The New Yorker describes it as a "mostly well-crafted novel," praising its depiction of an "unraveling" marriage and a "recession-hit Midwest," while finding its conclusion somewhat "outlandish."[20]
The New York Times likens Gillian Flynn to acclaimed suspense novelist Patricia Highsmith. Gone Girl, the Times goes on to say, is Flynn's "dazzling breakthrough," adding that the novel is "wily, mercurial, subtly layered and populated by characters so well imagined that they’re hard to part with."[11] A USA Today review focuses on bookseller enthusiasm for the book, quoting a Jackson, Mississippi store manager saying, "It will make your head spin off."[21] People Magazine's review found the novel "a delectable summer read" that burrows "deep into the murkiest corners of the human psyche."[22] A Chatelaine review commends the novel's suspense, its intricately detailed plot and the way it keeps the reader "unnervingly off balance."[23]
Many reviewers have noted the difficulty of writing about Gone Girl, because so little in the first half of the novel is what it seems to be. In his Time review, Lev Grossman describes the novel as a "house of mirrors." He also writes "Its content may be postmodern, but it takes the form of a thoroughbred thriller about the nature of identity and the terrible secrets that can survive and thrive in even the most intimate relationships."[24]
In an article in Salon.com, Laura Miller laments that Gone Girl was conspicuously absent from the winning ranks of prestigious literary awards, like the National Book Awards, and the Pulitzer Prize. The same article argues that Gone Girl was snubbed because it belongs to the mystery genre. Judges awarding top literary prizes "have all refrained from honoring any title published within the major genres."[25] Gone Girl was chosen for the inaugural Salon What To Read Awards (2012).[26] The novel has also been short-listed for the Women's Prize for Fiction. Natasha Walter, one of the Women's Prize judges in 2013, told the Independent that there was considerable debate amongst the judges about the inclusion of Gone Girl in the finalists' circle. Walter indicated that crime fiction is often "overlooked" by those in a position to make literary commendations.[27]
Adaptations
Audio book
Gone Girl was recorded as a Random House audio book, featuring the voices of Julia Whelan as Amy Dunne and Kirby Heyborne as Nick Dunne. It is an unabridged edition on fifteen compact discs and takes 19.25 hours to hear in its entirety.[28]
Film adaptation
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American actress Reese Witherspoon's film production company and 20th Century Fox bought the screen rights to Gone Girl, for which they paid US$1.5 million. The novel's author Gillian Flynn was engaged to write the screenplay. Witherspoon produced the film version along with Leslie Dixon, Bruna Papandrea, and Ceán Chaffin. Witherspoon was drawn to the script because of its strong female character and its use of multiple perspectives and non-linear structure.[29] In May 2013, it was announced that David Fincher was brought on as director,[30] with Ben Affleck cast as Nick and Rosamund Pike in the role of Amy. New Regency and Fox agreed to co-finance the film.[31][32] The film was released October 3, 2014.
See also
- Luckiest Girl Alive, a 2015 novel frequently compared to Gone Girl
References
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- ↑ 18.0 18.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ (20 August 2012) Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Retrieved with ProQuest.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Retrieved from MasterFILE Premier using EBSCO.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.Retrieved through EBSCO.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Volume 179, issue 23. Retrieved from Academic Search Premier
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ "Gone Girl." Publishers Weekly, Volume 259, issue 39. 24 September 2012. 71. Retrieved from EBSCO.
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