Article #9727

The Guardian - World News

The Guardian - World News

Title The Body Builders by Albertine Clarke review – a compelling debut of mental meltdown Source The Guardian - World News
Description

A young woman’s dissociation from reality and her road to recovery are vividly rendered in this striking novel

Meet Ada, the anguished young narrator of 26-year-old Albertine Clarke’s radically strange and engrossing debut novel. Adrift in London, Ada occupies herself by swimming in her apartment’s basement pool and generally hiding from the world until she finds herself on the verge of a tumultuous mental collapse. If you’re allergic to the kind of novel in which characters exchange lines such as “I’m not real”, “Neither am I”, then it’s a case of diminishing returns. Otherwise, the book bears rich rewards.

The title refers to Ada’s father, an IT technician who is kicked out by Ada’s mother when he becomes obsessed with the gym – and much of the book explores how we create ourselves and others. Ada grows up surrounded by the marshy countryside near Norwich and early on experiences episodes of dissociation and ontological insecurity, including auditory and visual hallucinations. She imagines a voice on the radio saying her parents are getting divorced. The voice is “like a door swung open inside her head. Through it she could see a black tunnel, like a mine shaft, stretching down inside her.”

Continue reading...
Link https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/apr/24/the-body-builders-by-albertine-clarke-review-a-compelling-debut-of-mental-meltdown Published At 2026-04-24 02:00:33 (3 weeks ago)
Created At 2026-04-24 02:10:20 Updated At 2026-04-24 02:10:20