Payback, Mary Gordon
Payback, Mary Gordon
List: $20.00 | Sale: $14.00
Club: $10.00

Payback

Author: Mary Gordon

Narrator: Cynthia Darlow

Unabridged: 10 hr 27 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/01/2020


Synopsis

In this novel of lifelong reckoning between two women by the award-winning Mary Gordon, we meet Quin Archer, the revenge-loving queen of the reality-TV show Payback. Unbeknownst to her many fans, Quin was once an angry teen named Heidi, whose true story may be known only to Agnes, her art teacher at a private New England girls’ school in the 1970s. Then a young woman herself, Agnes saw a spark of originality in the brooding Heidi. But when she suggested Heidi visit the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, the girl returned with a disastrous account of having been picked up at the museum by an older man. Agnes’s stunned response will haunt both women for decades.
 
Gordon narrates this tale of #MeToo misunderstanding, from a time before there was language to contain it, with a sharp sense of life’s changing tempo. She takes us through Heidi’s disappearance and reinvention as Quin, and Agnes’s escape into career and family in Italy, exploring their choices and potential for happiness until, inevitably, they meet again. Payback is a remarkable book about the precise weight of our words and deeds from a writer whose moral vision is deeply rewarding in its subtlety.

About The Author

MARY GORDON is the author of nine novels, including Final Payments, The Love of My Youth, Pearl, and There Your Heart Lies; six works of nonfiction, including the memoirs Circling My Mother and The Shadow Man; and three collections of short fiction, including The Stories of Mary Gordon, which was awarded the Story Prize. She teaches at Barnard College and lives in New York City.Payback, her ninth novel, will be available from Pantheon Books in September 2021.Cynthia Darlow is an audiobook narrator whose credits include Mister Owita’s Guide to Gardening by Carol Wall, Rooms by Lauren Oliver, and Death at Breakfast by Beth Gutcheon


Reviews

Goodreads review by Jessica on June 10, 2020

A novel about one act of betrayal and how it plays out over two women's lives. I enjoyed this, but found it uneven. With two characters like this, especially when they are so different, it should be more balanced and here the author's sympathies so clearly lay with one woman (who was already the mor......more

Goodreads review by Vincent on October 09, 2020

I really like Mary Gordon and have read most of her books. In reviewing this book in the September 14, 2020 edition of the The New York Times Book Review, Francine Prose succinctly and accurately described the themes that occur again and again in Gordon's books, including this book: "[M]ary Gordon is......more

Goodreads review by Anne on October 07, 2020

Ugggg, way too much hand wringing, self loathing and excema producing repentance for a careless reaction....and way too much vindictiveness. It overtook the entire book, which had some great characters. Did the author really have to bring politics into it, the “I’m ashamed of America and our preside......more

Goodreads review by Natalie on May 21, 2020

I loved some of this book but I found parts of it over-written and too dense. This is the story of two women, which began with the belief that a teacher could make up for the wrongs in a pupils’ life. These efforts and the trauma they unleashed haunted both women for the rest of their lives. Agnes w......more

Goodreads review by Carol on January 07, 2025

Now I've never liked Mary Gordon, but I have to give the Devil her due. PAYBACK is the most entertaining, outrageous, and irreverent novel she's ever written! The plot is simple -- a mean girl seeking revenge on the teacher who let her down. But Mary Gordon uses the trashiest of tropes to unleash a t......more


Quotes

“Her most topical and propulsive novel to date.” —Heller McAlpin, Los Angeles Times

“[Gordon] is expert at creating characters of clear moral, intellectual and what might be called aesthetic goodness—then testing that goodness in a clarifying, often life-altering way.” —Ellen Akins, The Washington Post

“Morally complex . . . Since her marvelous first novel, Final Payments (1978), [Gordon] has concerned herself with questions of ethics, belief, responsibility, devotion, obligation. What do human beings owe one another and how can we know what is the right thing to do? How are we to love the ungrateful, deluded and ill-tempered who cannot return our love? Who is the victim, who is the victimizer, and how easily are those roles reversed?” —Francine Prose, The New York Times

“Nuanced . . . Explores how one moment can completely change the trajectory of two women’s lives forever . . . Gordon’s understated and beautiful prose reveals the murkiness of victimhood, forgiveness, and redemption.” —Carolyn Quimby, Chronogram

“Gordon’s masterful structure and sense of voice create an intensely moving meditation on the relationship of the past self and its deeds to the present, as well as a brilliant evocation of the emotional impact of aging on women’s lives and identities.” —Kristen McDermott, Historical Novel Society

“Gordon creates finely nuanced moral quandaries and explores the deep toxicity of sexism with scintillating energy and piercing inquisitiveness . . . Every facet of this psychologically and sensuously lush novel about damage and nurture, altruism and selfishness, disorder and art, privacy and meaningful work, sexual violence and blame, hate and forgiveness poses profound questions about womanhood, how one lives one’s life, what truly matters, and what we owe others.” —Donna Seaman, Booklist (starred review)

“Excellent . . . Contrasts the 1970s world of upper-class women’s education with the #MeToo era . . . Gordon nails period details and vividly describes her characters’ worlds, whether they are restoring a work of art or raising a daughter. This mesmerizing novel hits hard.”
Publishers Weekly (starred review)

Payback offers many pleasures, not only the range in voices but also the evocation of two eras, the early 1970s and the current decade . . . Beautiful writing, with wonderful observations on families, life in Italy, aging, and the passage of time.” —Sarah McCraw Crow, BookPage