Thursday, October 20, 2022

And Again

Chiarella, Jessica. And Again. New York: Touchstone. 2016. Print


First Sentences:

Maybe it's like being born. I don't know. It's impossible to compare it to something I cannot remember. When I finally come back to myself, it takes me a moment to realize I haven't died.



Description:
 
Four adults, Hannah, David, Connie, and Linda, are given a chance of living illness-free lives in Jessica Chiarella's debut novel, And Again. Through an experimental medical DNA procedure, each of these people has been transplanted into genetic duplicates of their original bodies, bodies which now are without the deadly diseases, paralysis, or tumors found in their previous bodies. All their memories have been preserved into these new clones, allowing these first human guinea pigs to resume their previous lives in unblemished, healthy bodies. 
 
If they can.
I would be either cured, or I'd be dead. Both options were preferable to remaining as I was.
In the first weeks and months following the procedure, each finds his or her new substitute body perfect, youthful, and marvelously alive ...but with several unexpected quirks. Because their bodies have lost some muscle memory, Hannah the artist, no longer can paint. Linda, who spent the last eight years in a hospital completely paralyzed and isolated following an automobile accident, now must re-join her husband and children who are definitely uncomfortable being around her. David, the politician, still has his same unsavory interpersonal habits, while Connie, the actress, stricken with AIDS scarring and looming death, now tries to recapture her Hollywood charisma.
It's been my experience that life has a way of ripping the rug out from under you just as you're finding your footing.
The four meet weekly with a therapist as part of the transplant program to discuss what they feel, how they are adapting to their new bodies, and what challenges they are facing. Together and separately, the patient address unexpected situations, thoughts, and emotions which might scuttle this experiential program and threaten potential funding needed to expand its availability to the general population.
 
And besides experiencing the world through new eyes and substitute bodies, their relationships with each of the test group and their old friends also changes, grows, lingers, and is seemingly forever modified for better or worse.

It's a challenging concept, one that subtly asks readers how they might deal with receiving a new, perfect, younger version of themselves. Given a second chance, what would you do? How would you change? Whom would your continue to be close to and whom might you move away from? 
 
This new world and body, they find, are not all good nor all bad. Faced with difficult choices throughout the book, these characters whom readers grow so close to, struggle and move onward in their new lives. Maybe not as we readers might have done, but the test group's choices and decisions seem genuine and all too human. A great, interesting read from a new author I plan to read more from.
And I wonder if someone can be homesick for herself, for the person she was just months ago.   
Happy reading.



Fred
____________________

If this book interests you, be sure to check out:

Watson, S.J. Before I Go to Sleep  
A woman awakens one morning with no memory of who she is, who the man is in bed next to her, nor any details of her life over the part 30 years. She finds she can remember things which occur throughout the day, but then those memories are erased each night. As the days pass, she begins to suspect people around her are not who they say they are and might be taking advantage of her.  (previously reviewed here)

 

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