You Don't Love Me YetA Novel

Jonathan Lethem

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You Don't Love Me Yet

By: Jonathan Lethem

Narrarated by: Jonathan Lethem

From the incomparable Jonathan Lethem, a raucous romantic farce that explores the paradoxes of love and art

Lucinda Hoekke spends eight hours a day at the Complaint Line, listening to anonymous callers air their random grievances. Most of the time, the work is excruciatingly tedious. But one frequent caller, who insists on speaking only to Lucinda, captivates her with his off-color ruminations and opaque self-reflections. In blatant defiance of the rules, Lucinda and the Complainer arrange a face-to-face meeting—and fall desperately in love.
Consumed by passion, Lucinda manages only to tear herself away from the Complainer to practice with the alternative band in which she plays bass. The lead singer of the band is Matthew, a confused young man who works at the zoo and has kidnapped a kangaroo to save it from ennui. Denise, the drummer, works at No Shame, a masturbation boutique. The band’s talented lyricist, Bedwin, conflicted about the group’s as-yet-nonexistent fame, is suffering from writer’s block. Hoping to recharge the band’s creative energy, Lucinda “suggests” some of the Complainer’s philosophical musings to Bedwin. When Bedwin transforms them into brilliant songs, the band gets its big break, including an invitation to appear on L.A.’s premiere alternative radio show. The only problem is the Complainer. He insists on joining the band, with disastrous consequences for all. Brimming with satire and sex, You Don’t Love Me Yet is a funny and affectionate send-up of the alternative band scene, the city of Los Angeles, and the entire genre of romantic comedy, but remains unmistakably the work of the inimitable Jonathan Lethem.

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  • Edition: Unabridged
  • Author: Jonathan Lethem (See All Books)
  • Date Released: Sep 17, 2007
  • Publisher: Random House Audio
  • Genre: Fiction & Literature, Contemporary Fiction, Music, Humor

Total File Size: 171 MB (5 files) Total Length: 6 Hours, 14 Minutes

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09.17.07
Jonathan Lethem, You Don’t Love Me Yet
2007 | Label: Random House Audio

Anguished twentysomethings flail about for real connections in an increasingly virtual world.
Literally and figuratively worlds away from the bustling Brooklyn of Lethem’s best novels, 2007's You Don’t Love Me Yet opens in a blank-walled conceptual art gallery in Los Angeles, a vast, sterile environment prefiguring the emptiness to come. The bass player in an unknown (and unnamed) rock band, Lucinda Hoekke works days in the gallery taking all-purpose complaints from disgruntled Angelenos for an art project, cataloguing, but not assuaging, their discontent.

The boundaries of Lucinda’s assignment begin to fray when she meets (so to speak) the man she calls the Complainer, whose disembodied voice spins explicit but unerotic tales of sexual conquests past. As the Complainer’s calls multiply, Lucinda’s fascination grows; fragments of his monologues are recycled as grist for the band’s creative mill, and she starts breaking the complaint line’s rules, seeking out a flesh-and-blood relationship with a man she knows only as static.

Set, subtly but purposefully, just before the dawn of the internet era (only the most fashion-forward character has email, and there’s nary a cell phone in sight), Lethem’s brief novel tills the familiar turf of anguished twentysomethings flailing about for real connections in an increasingly virtual world. His prose is pungent, particularly when he’s capturing the flavor of the band’s impromptu loft show and the aging A&R men (“unyouthful men in youthful clothes”) who flock to them like gnats.

Reading his own text, Lethem’s voice is steady and clear, aptly replicating the text’s forays into matter-of-fact surrealism. Although much of the novel lies between quotation marks, the author makes little attempt to differentiate between voices, save ending each utterance from the band’s socially retarded guitar genius with a querulous rising note. The book loses steam in its second half, as the relationship between Lucinda and the Complainer becomes physical, their coupling described with the graphic dispassion of a nature film. Lethem turns prose pirouettes as the book falls apart, but he’s skating on thin air.

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