The writer - who turns out to be the narrator’s ex - offers no way out of this apocalyptic scenario: we are on the Titanic and ‘should be utterly consumed with dread’ our children and grandchildren will suffer so much that ‘the living will envy the dead’. Our society had become too fragmented and dysfunctional for us to fix, in time, the calamitous mistakes we had made. It was too late, we had dithered too long. His lecture, given in a polished, emotionless voice, is about the death of the planet: The suffering begins at the start when the narrator, a woman of a certain age whose name we never learn, goes to a talk by a writer, whose name we also never learn. ‘Make the audience suffer as much as possible,’ advised Alfred Hitchcock, and Sigrid Nunez, whose subject is emotional extremity, follows suit. Weighing in at 200-odd pages, it can be read in five hours flat and will leave you staring into endless night. What Are You Going Through is both brilliant and mercifully brief.
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