The Lover’s Dictionary by David LevithanFarrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011

This is the story of a relationship, alphabetically: a dictionary whose entries are vignettes from a couple’s life together. Sometimes an entry is a page or a paragraph or a few pages; sometimes it’s just a line, like:

autonomy, n.
“I want my books to have their own shelves,” you said, and that’s how I knew it would be okay to live together. (23)

As the entries accumulate, you start to get a sense of the couple’s personalities and pasts: both are smart and bookish; he’s shy; she’s more socially at ease; he writes; she drinks. Her dad left her mom; her family life has been difficult; in the past she’s dated the wrong kind of guy. He’s stable, with a steady job and parents who were always supportive of him and are still together and happy. They live in New York City, and it’s the explicitly NYC-ish entries that I found myself loving the most: “ebullient,” about running through the rain down 6th Ave after a concert while everyone else is huddled under an awning; “halcyon,” about a perfect snow-day, going back to bed because everything’s closed; “impromptu,” about summer Friday afternoons that don’t have a plan but turn out delicious, lunch followed by museum-ing or taking the ferry or whatever city-ish things you’ve been meaning to do but haven’t had time for.

I like, too, how the narrator captures the ups and downs of a relationship, loveliness and doubt and the everyday routines, and I like Levithan’s language, which is sometimes matter-of-fact, sometimes fanciful, sometimes luminous. I like the unexpected bits, like this great image in the entry for “paleontology”: “I sat there as you excavated your boyfriends, laid the bones out on the table for me to see. I shifted them around, tried to reassemble them, if only to see if they bore any resemblance to me” (157). I still like Levithan’s YA work more, maybe because I really love what he does with a more straightforward novelistic form, maybe because the grown-up “issues” of this book (a partner who drinks too much, the question of infidelity) felt a little over-emphasized at times, but still, I’m glad I read this.


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4 responses to “The Lover’s Dictionary by David LevithanFarrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011”

  1. Stefanie Avatar

    This sounds a little different and like an enjoyable read.

  2. Heather Avatar
    Heather

    Stefanie, yes, on both counts 🙂

  3. Vishy Avatar

    Wonderful review, Heather! I didn’t know that Levithan wrote novels on his own too! I have read one book by him and Rachel Cohn ‘Dash and Emily’s Book of Dares’ and liked it. ‘The Lover’s Dictionary’ sounds like a wonderful book. I will add this to my ‘TBR’ list. The premise of the book (the dictionary form) seems similar to that of the book ‘A Concise Chinese-English Dictionary for Lovers’ by Xiaolu Guo. Have you read this book?

  4. Heather Avatar
    Heather

    Vishy, way belatedly, thanks, and ooh, I hadn’t heard of “A Concise Chinese-English Dictionary for Lovers” but it sounds pleasing – I do like the dictionary form!

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