Member Reviews

While I didn't find a "message, meaning or anything " in the book. It was just a way to go through Katharina's life and see everything that happens.
It almost reminds me of my life at times!

Thank you Netgalley for the ARC

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I wanted to like this more than I did. I felt like parts of it were engaging and well written and other parts just fell flat. Perhaps this is due to the fact that it is translated so may have lost some of it's charm due to that. This is one of those books where not a lot happens but a lot is happening to or around the main character. This was clearly not a good fit for me but others may find it more enjoyable.

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A good book with humour and a glimpse at real life as children are growing up.

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Really fun read with a great story! I think my readers will love it!

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'She got concussions and cuts and extensive grazing, was bitten by dogs and swans, and managed, with the assurance of a sleepwalker, to find the rotten branch in every tree she climbed.'

Katharina has discovered a lump in her breast, but she doesn’t have time nor the desire to ponder what it means, particularly the haunting possibility of her death. What would her husband Costas, son Alex and daughter Helli do without her? The novel begins with Katharina heading to school to rescue her daughter from her gushing nosebleed. It’s the ‘here we go again’ prospect of dealing with the staff, exhausted by Helli’s overwhelming presence. Looking like a horror movie scene, she takes Helli home, naturally Costas is away for work and again she must cancel her music class.Surely the parents of her students are fed up with her. Everything between her and Costas is a mess, constantly fighting, weekend partners. Killian is coming for a visit, her best friend from her student years. Her body is hungry for love, touch. Maybe she can seduce him, her husband has chosen a party over coming home for the weekend, a party he claims he definitely won’t have fun at. What choice does he have? Her job playing ‘music time’ with kindergarten children won’t feed them all, right?

Their daughter Helli needs so much of everything. She creates chaos even when she isn’t trying to. At times, she doesn’t seem to need her mother at all, at others she is too much even for herself and needs rescue. A curious child who has meltdowns, who barrels on regardless of who or what is in her way, there is so much she admires and finds exasperating about her girl. A clever girl, but disordered. Katharina knows she and Costas need to talk about Helli, do something, but there just hasn’t been time.

Which is worse, facing everything wrong in her life, or chemo? With her family history, she knows her chances don’t look good. This lump must be the end. She can’t stop poking the fear, she can’t figure out what to do about her daughter. What about Alex? One moment she is questioning his sexuality and disinterest in girls, the next he has a girlfriend. Her children are hurtling into adulthood, so much happens in one day.

What if she dies, how can she when Helli needs her. “Mum, if I didn’t have you, I don’t think I’d know what to do.” Katharina isn’t sure what to do either to help her daughter.

Can you seduce your old friend while chasing after rats your husband thought would be good pets for your family? Can you ignore your worries over your health, your failing marriage, and all the fears for your children long enough to sink into a kiss?

Look At Me has Katharina looking at herself and figuring that although her life is a mess, it’s a mess she loves. There is humor, I particularly loved Helli, and there are quiet sad moments too. Nothing riveting happens, and yet things are changing. Just a moment in the life of a harried mother.

Available Now

Text Publishing

Translated from German

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WOW! What a great find for a great read. I'd like to thank NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read a galley copy of Look at Me. From what I understand, this is Marieke Krugel's first book that has been translated from German to English. I hope more of her books are published in English. Look at Me is the story of Katharina, who lives outside of Berlin and has found "a something" in her left breast. While dealing with the stress of "a something," she is also juggling a marriage, a teenaged son and a pre-teen daughter with emotional issues. The story has elements of both drama and humor, real-life issues with marriage and childrearing. Katharina and her family are some of the most readable and believable characters I've read in a fiction book. Adults and older teens alike would enjoy this book. What a find!

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This review will be published on 26 February at the link below and on Goodreads.

In brief ★★★½

One of my reading goals this year was to pick up more works in translation, so when I won a copy of Look at Me, translated from German by Imogen Taylor, from Text Publishing, I moved it to the top of the pile. The story follows the life of mother Katharina across the course of a very challenging day, questioning her sense of self, the role of women and the ridiculousness of life. There's a great balance between serious issues and humour, but the writing did feel stilted and a bit awkward. There are some fabulous characters though, and I read it easily in one evening.

In depth

Plot: Wife and mother Katharina gave up her career as a musicologist to raise her children Alex (17) and Helli (11), who seem to have subsumed her identity to their needs. When she finds a 'something' on her breast, she starts to reflect and question her life, while carrying out the obligations of the day. Meanwhile her husband Costas is drifting away, working from Berlin and giving rise to new possibilities when her old flatmate Kilian visits for the night. Part contemplative reflection, part farcical comedy, the story ultimately exposes the absurdities of life, honestly treating the challenges of motherhood and womanhood.

Characters: Krügel's two main female characters grow over the course of the novel - Kat slowly stops putting up the mental block about 'the something' and finds a way to express her fears, while Helli, struggling with ADHD, leaves her girlhood behind and comes to an important personal realisation. This growth gives the women of this story depth, while of the men, only Kilian, it seems, evolves as he contemplates the ways his own life is about to change dramatically. Each of the characters feels true in this story, even if some remain more sketch-like (Alex, Theo, Heinz, Sissi). Not all are likeable - it can be hard to sympathise with Helli, and at times Kat's own reflections are repetitive and frustrating - but there is a realism to these irritations that draws you into Kat's emotional world.

Themes: Motherhood and mortality are the primary themes of Look at Me, and each is interrogated on almost every page. Kat's children are constantly present, either in person or in her thoughts, and she finds herself thinking back to her own mother's life (and death) a lot too. Mortality appears in the form of 'the something', but also in a number of family tragedies, and even by the reminder of human fragility illustrated by her neighbour Theo's severed thumb. There are some great passages of feminist thought, and the possibility of infidelity hovers on the edges of the tale.

Writing: This is a tricky thing to comment on in a translated work, and I won't ever know how much of the style is directly picked up by the translator, or dervies from the process of translation itself. For me, while the writing was easy to read, it felt stilted and awkward a lot of the time. The sentences are generally short, direct and simple, which I felt created distance between Kat and I - I felt for her, but didn't invest as much as I wanted to given the first person narration. Having said that, the dialogue was well-written, with distinct voices, and the more distant approach worked well for the comic scenes. The imagery and metaphors weren't overdone (Theo's thumb, the dryer, etc.), but added nuance to the overarching messages.

Recommended if you liked: The Mummy Bloggers

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Look At Me is an appropriate title here because this book is all about the selfish me me me lead character. Her inner dialogue was appalling and I found nothing remotely likeable or relatable about this character at all. Even her children were terrible.

The most infuriating thing was that the lead character tried to convince the reader that she was doing everything for others, but really inside she was just oh so very selfish.

The writing was messy and the layout was confusing. The reader does not need all so many extraneous details about characters that have nothing to do with the story.

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Decent book, i loved the protagonist. The constant, in depth about music got annoying. Ended up skipping through those sections. Too repetitive. Overall, entertaining.

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The synopsis on the book description is what entice me the most to read this book. I think this is the first time I read a book that offers self contemplation and self identity of a mom. It is a good read for moms out there who also have insecurity about self identity like me.

The author gradually introduce us to Katharina character. From how she interacts with her daughter, how she sees her son, how she treats her neighbors, how she thinks of her best friends and her own sister, and also the relationship with her husband. Readers also will, be taken to the multi-tasking mind of a mom, something that all the moms could relate too.

With the slow and steady pace until 3rd quarter of the book, author still surprise me with unexpected twists and turns. To be honest, I was turned off of the bratty behavior from one of the character kids, yet there’s a reason for that. A reason that revealed after reading several more chapters into the book.

The pace near the ending of the book feel rushed. It feels like we are on a race to the finish line. But I think the change of pace is a good choice because if not, the reader might feel bored. The last sentence of the book still open many possibilities and I kinda hoping for a sequel.

Reading this book is like riding a medium-paced rollercoaster. It can make you laugh with the author’s dry humor, cry with the misery and tragedy written on this book, but also thoughtful by reading in contemplative mind of Catharina. All in all, it was an enjoyable reading for me.

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