When Dr. Leo Liebenstein's wife disappears, she leaves behind a single, confounding clue: a woman who looks, talks, and behaves exactly like her--or "almost "exactly like her--and even audaciously claims to be her. While everyone else is fooled by this imposter, Leo knows better than to trust his senses in matters of the heart. Certain that the original Rema is alive and in hiding, Leo embarks on a quixotic journey to reclaim his lost love. With the help of his psychiatric patient Harvey--who believes himself to be a secret agent who can control the weather--Leo attempts to unravel the mystery of the spousal switch. His investigation leads him to the enigmatic guidance of the meteorologist Dr. Tzvi Gal-Chen, the secret workings of the Royal Academy of Meteorology in their cosmic conflict with the 49 Quantum Fathers, and the unwelcome conviction that somehow he--or maybe his wife, or maybe even Harvey--lies at the center of all these unfathomables. From the streets of New York to the southernmost reaches of Patagonia, Leo's erratic quest becomes a test of how far he is willing to take his struggle against the seemingly uncontestable truth he knows in his heart to be false. "Atmospheric Disturbances "is at once a moving love story, a dark comedy, a psychological thriller, and a deeply disturbing portrait of a fracturing mind. With tremendous compassion and dazzling literary sophistication, Rivka Galchen investigates the moment of crisis when you suddenly realize that the reality you insist upon is no longer one you can accept, and the person you love has become merely the person you live with. This highly inventive debut explores the mysterious nature of human relationships, and how we spend our lives trying to weather the storms of our own making.
Again, like someone else said, this is not Pynchonian in the slightest. This is a love story, albiet, an intellectual one as the writer certainly has quite an abundance of knowledge in the field that she writes about. It's short, and not many sentences require tons of re-reading to understand, which isn't a bad thing at all. It's a fun novel. And it's not entirely classifiable by itself either; it's not post-modern, nor is it purely for entertainment, nor is it tons of other things - it's simply a very good book with a combination of different styles. The characters and the plot they carry out are depressive and give the reader a certain "sinking feeling" while reading it, a sort of dramatic irony all throughout. All the while, the author and her wonderful prose present lovely humor at the same time. Recommended.
something pretty made out of something sad
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
Even though this novel was not a piece of "realism" in the most straightforward sense, what I loved about it most was how it was so very "real" emotionally. Uncannily so. You could really see a mind gathering up every possible defense--and this gathering was often hilarious--in order to avoid painful insights. And in the process of all that avoidance, something of itself beautiful gets made, like some enormous quilt being made in order to distract oneself from some larger sadness. And the sentences--I just wanted to underline like every other one of them!
No, it's not Pynchon. Yes, it's great
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
So yeah, the coverage on this book is a little confusing. This book IS great, and it IS Murakami-esque, and it IS Austeresque, and it IS heartbreaking. It's NOT so Pynchonesque, but I understood how it casually picked up that label in the press, because it's an easy quicktag on something that plays extensively with scientific language and ideas, and it's also not utterly alien in theme from the paranoid attention to detail of a book like Crying of Lot 49. But to such different ends and with different concerns. But that's not to say that this book isn't (or even is) fantastic...it's just descriptive kind of, without value judgment. But when it does come to value judgment, the judgment that belongs here is that this is something emotionally ambitious, sincere and playful at once, and sentence by sentence it's just miles better than most writing today. I felt emotionally and intellectually engaged, which is basically what I seek out as a reader. The narrator's ways of thinking, and of seeing the world, will not win him citizenship awards, but will be achingly familiar to anyone who has ever honestly introspected. Also, what I guess was most interesting to me, and most happily obscured, is the odd ways in which the meteorologist Tzvi Gal-Chen comes into the narrative; this, weirdly, seemed the emotional core of the book to me, though I wouldn't want to spoil things by explaining why I felt this way.
Tender and Beautiful and Really Funny
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
I read this book very quickly and then started reading it over again right away. What struck me most about it is how sincerely and beautifully and precisely (and inevitably humorously) described are all the fluctuating emotional states of being in love. I also loved that I didn't know quite where to stand in relation to the book--it's not quite going for realism, nor for absurdity, nor for fairy tale. It operates instead along the rigorous but odd rules of a dream.
Absorbing and hugely affecting
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
Atmospheric Disturbances is a funny and haunting reflection on relationships and love. In this incredibly imaginative book, the reader travels though Leo's mesmerizing world of reality and illusion. At the end of the journey we realize that nothing can ever be the same as before. The characters of Leo, Rema, Harvey and the mysterious Tzvi are memorable. This multilayered novel is poignant and compelling. The prose is eloquent. I couldn't put Atmospheric Disturbances down.
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