Let Me Explain You, Annie Liontas
Let Me Explain You, Annie Liontas
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Let Me Explain You

Author: Annie Liontas

Narrator: Robertson Dean

Unabridged: 10 hr 48 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/14/2015


Synopsis

A “big rollicking, tender novel with a truly original comic voice at its center” (George Saunders), Let Me Explain You is about a Greek American family and its patriarch - - part Zorba, part King Lear- - and announces the arrival of a significant new voice in contemporary literature.

Let Me Explain You begins with a letter: Stavros Stavros Mavrakis, Greek immigrant and proud owner of the Gala Diner in New Jersey, believes he has just ten days left to live. He sends a scathing email to the estranged ex-wife and three grown daughters, outlining his wishes for how they each might better their lives. He then prepares for his final hours and wonders why he is alone. With varying degrees of laughter and scorn, his family and friends have dismissed his behavior as nothing more than a predictable plea for attention, but when Stavros really does disappear, those closest to him are forced to confront the possibility of his death and the realities of their loss.

A vibrant tour de force told from multiple perspectives and driving to a surprising conclusion, Let Me Explain You eulogizes Stavros Stavros,  turning in part of his realization that “a man spends his whole life trying to say it better,” while giving necessary voice to the women in his life. This multigenerational  novel explores our origins and family myths, reinvention and forgiveness, hunger and what feeds us. Let Me Explain You is a beautifully told, heartfelt story, and its meditations on the communal power of story telling and family-- most notably the relationship between fathers and daughters, but also the complex bond of sisterhood — are at turns and deeply moving. 

About Annie Liontas

Annie Liontas is the genderqueer author of the novel Let Me Explain You and the coeditor of A Manner of Being: Writers on their Mentors. Her work has appeared in The New York Times Book Review, Gay Magazine, NPR, Electric Literature, BOMB, The Believer, Guernica, McSweeney’s, and other publications. A graduate of Syracuse University’s MFA program, she is a professor of writing at George Washington University. Annie has served as a mentor for Pen City’s incarcerated writers and helped secure a Mellon Foundation grant on Disability Justice to bring storytelling to communities in the criminal justice system. She lives in Philadelphia.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Angela M on July 05, 2015

3.5 stars This is about a Greek family, a bit dysfunctional, a bit off the wall , a bit of a mess really , but it could be any family and they don't have to be Greek. I love the title and that it could mean let me explain it to you or let me explain you. I can almost hear my Italian grandfather in h......more

Goodreads review by Esil on July 04, 2015

I feel like I just read two books -- one that I found disappointing and one that I quite liked. I really wanted to like Let Me Explain You. It has all the ingredients of the type of book I usually like. Stavros Stavros -- an irascible egotist -- immigrated from Greece to the U.S. with his first wife......more

Goodreads review by Megan on May 18, 2015

For a first novel, this is a darned good one. And yet, we almost got off on the wrong foot. The first chapter, the email that the father sends to his three daughters and ex-wife, it almost put me off. It seemed a little too much like the introduction to Jonathan Safran Foer's Everything Is Illuminat......more

Goodreads review by Karen on July 25, 2015

I laughed really hard at some things in the beginning... Things Stavros said ..especially the multiple "let me explain you" could apply to my German immigrant Grandpa...he messed up a lot in speaking English... Lol most of the rest of the story just didn't interest me... I kept putting the book down.......more

Goodreads review by Hugo on September 03, 2015

As an immigrant, I understood parts of the characters in a deeply personal way. I could understand Stavros's drive, his relentlessness, and his inability to (often?) process the feelings and limitations of those around him. It was like that in the house where I grew up, with a patriarch of my own. H......more