A brilliant, darkly comic, and startlingly honest novel, A Week of
This follows the lives of an extended family over one increasingly
desperate week. At the centre of the novel is 38-year-old Manda, a
tough, sarcastic woman who has yet to make peace with the town she was
brought to as a teenager after her parents' messy divorce. Her estranged
mother is crazy, her father is ill and in retreat, her damaged older
brother is growing restless and distant, her stepbrother is a grown-up
teenager without any real friends, and her husband is a tight-lipped,
depressed store-owner who has been pressing Manda to have a baby.
Full of barbed dialogue and hilariously deadpan descriptions of family
dynamics and the kind of awkward social dances that get performed every
day, A Week of This is a book for people who always feel a little out
of place, right where they are. People who are smart enough to know
something has gone wrong, but can't figure out how to fix it. People who
know they aren't kids anymore, but are not quite ready to grow up.
"A Week of This is bleak, funny, sad, smart, and unlike any novel I
have ever read. The lives of these characters are so richly imagined I
could taste the furnace dust, smell the backed-up sewer, feel the thump
of every hangover. It's an authentic, unsentimental literary experiment
that doesn't read like an experiment. Nathan Whitlock has exposed the
timeless heart of lower-middle-class everywhere." -- Todd Babiak, author
of The Book of Stanley and The Garneau Block.