Woman of Interest, Tracy ONeill
Woman of Interest, Tracy ONeill
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Woman of Interest
A Memoir

Author: Tracy O'Neill

Narrator: Jeena Yi

Unabridged: 8 hr 27 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: HarperAudio

Published: 06/25/2024


Synopsis

MOST ANTICIPATED READ and MUST READ OF 2024: The Millions, LitHub, Esquire, BookRiot, Bustle, Vulture, Boston Globe, Brit & Co, Southern Living“Woman of Interest is a memoir wrapped in a mystery—an inward examination of family, identity, and self, but also an actual gumshoe detective story. Each extraordinary, prickly sentence is conjured with clarity and conflict. Funny, moving, mean—an exceptional book from an extraordinary writer.” —Kevin Nguyen, author of New Waves“Dark, deeply funny. . . . Dashiell Hammett meets Fleabag.”—The New YorkerA National Book Foundation’s 5 Under 35 honoree delivers her first work of nonfiction: a compulsively readable, genre-bending story of finding her missing birth mother and, along the way, learning the priceless power of self-knowledge.In 2020, Tracy O’Neill began to rethink her ideas of comfort and safety. Just out of a ten-year relationship and thirtysomething, she was driven by an acute awareness that the mysterious mother she’d never met might be dying somewhere in South Korea.After contacting a grizzled private investigator, O’Neill took his suggested homework to heart when he disappeared before the job was done, picking up the trail of clues and becoming her own hell-bent detective. Despite COVID-19, the promise of what she might discover—the possibility that her biological mother was her kind of outlaw, whose life could inspire her own—was too tempting.Written like a mystery novel, Woman of Interest is a tale of self-discovery and fugitivity from convention that features a femme fatale of unique proportions, a former CIA operative with a criminal record, and a dogged investigator of radical connections outside the nuclear family. O’Neill gorgeously bends the detective genre to her own will as a writer, stepping out of the shadows of her own self-conception to illuminate the hopes of the woman of interest she is both chasing and becoming.

About Tracy O'Neill

Tracy O’Neill is the author of the novels The Hopeful and Quotients. She was named a National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 honoree, longlisted for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize, and was a Narrative 30 Below finalist. She was also named a Center for Fiction Emerging Writers Fellow. O’Neill teaches at Vassar College, and her writing has appeared in Granta, the New York Times, Rolling Stone, the Atlantic, The New Yorker, Bookforum, and other publications.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Carrie on July 06, 2024

Oof. This was such a frustrating read because I really wanted to like it. I love memoirs and the premise of this one is really interesting: An adopted Korean woman trying to find her birth mother and all of the challenges - internal and external - that go along with that search. In reality, the writ......more

Goodreads review by Ariel on May 23, 2024

The book starts off slowly as the author establishes her bona fides as a literary bad girl who likes literary bad boys and is a bit cynical and neurotic. She’s a transracial Korean adoptee who grew up in the blue collar suburbs around Boston which can be very rough indeed so she comes by all this to......more

Goodreads review by Jessica on July 01, 2024

3 1/2, practically 4 stars. O'Neill's prose and word choice is beautiful and I enjoyed that, the style hindered it a bit. I really had to push through until she flew to South Korea. I found the semi-stream-of-consciousness-style hindered the beginning as it led to uncertainty/confusion on the timeli......more

Goodreads review by Rosalind on June 03, 2024

Navel-gazing at its most whiny. I think I'm the wrong generation to appreciate this book. She ends it with a reference to Finnegan's Wake--really pretentious! (Starred review in Publishers Weekly.)......more

Goodreads review by Robin on August 06, 2024

I’ve read some good books this year and some dull ones. I’ve read books I wanted to cheer and books that had very little to say. And whether I liked a book almost always reflected whether I thought the story, memoir or history told me a good story. I can’t say that about Woman of Interest. The prose......more