Thursday, February 1, 2024

Review 461: When You Finish Saving the World

When You Finish Saving the World When You Finish Saving the World by Jesse Eisenberg
My rating: 3 of 5 stars


This short audio book is a character study of a small family: father, son, mother. The format is with audio tapes, and in different time periods, so for the father, Nathan, we have the present providing tapes to a therapist. Rachel feels that Nathan isn’t properly bonding with their newborn son. Nathan is trying to get more in touch with his feelings, and it sounded to me like he may be on the autism spectrum. Maybe that was unintentional by the author?

The son, Ziggy, is the second section, and in the future. It’s 2032 and he has counseling sessions for hitting someone who made a derogatory remark about another. His sessions require him to talk, without any prompts to a psychology bot. The future is vastly different (it’s idealized and maybe more like 2050?).

Then the last section is Rachel, which is in the past during her first year of college sending audio tapes to her boyfriend who joined the army just after the September 11 attacks. We already know he dies, so that does add poignancy to this section.

The title refers more to Rachel than the other characters, although she attributes that to her boyfriend; though overall, this “saving the world” is somewhat subtle. During the different tapes we see the different sides to the characters, at least for the first two sections. With Rachel we see her embarking on her changing understanding of the world through her classes, such as the manipulation in advertising.

The psychology aspect to the book is to just let someone talk about anything, just stream of consciousness, and will heal thyself. (works for some) One reason why journaling is good therapy? Anyway, I found the book was okay, not spectacular or anything, and was happy it was on the short side of length.



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