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Atmospheric Disturbances

At once a moving love story, a dark comedy, a psychological thriller, and a deeply disturbing portrait of a fracturing mind, this highly inventive debut explores ... Show synopsis

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  • Aug 18, 2009
    By Karen, Dallas, TX

    Though this started well, and I admired much of the writing on the sentence/paragraph level, there was just not enough narrative momentum. Galchen is obviously very smart, and some of the esoteric information was interesting. However, I felt unsatisfied with the ending. Leo was crazy, which I knew immediately. It was sad. The ending left me completely dissatisfied.

  • Jul 25, 2009
    By Feminist, Calcutta, 28, India

    In some cases, you may be midway through a story, novel, or film before realizing you're dealing with an unreliable narrator. He or she is biased, withholding information, or mentally unstable. (Charlotte Perkins Gilman's disturbing story "The Yellow Wallpaper" springs to mind as just one example.) In Atmospheric Disturbances, the debut novel by Rivka Galchen, it is apparent early on that the main character, psychiatrist Dr. Leo Liebenstein, is off his rocker. Perhaps that's putting it too strongly. Liebenstein is delusional, but his delusion is at first confined to one specific aspect of his life: he is convinced that his wife Rema has been replaced by a double, who he terms a simulacrum.

    As Liebenstein sets out to "find" his wife in a very roundabout manner, we learn how they met at the Hungarian Pastry Shop in Upper Manhattan shortly after Rema arrived in the U.S. from Argentina. We also learn that she is now a translator at the same hospital where Liebenstein works and we are told about one of Liebenstein's patients, Harvey, who is convinced he is a secret agent of the Royal Academy of Meteorology. The Academy, he believes, is able to manipulate weather and must act against mysterious forces that would use meteorological phenomena for their own purposes.

    While treating Harvey, at Rema's suggestion, Liebenstein decided to play along with Harvey's version of the world and pretend to be an agent of the Academy as well, a higher-ranking one passing orders along. To make the story convincing, Liebenstein and Rema chose the name of a scientist at the Royal Academy, Tzvi Gal-Chen, who was supposedly issuing Harvey instructions through his therapist. The ruse works and Liebenstein is able to keep Harvey from leaving town without warning by telling him that his assignment is to monitor the New York weather. But now, just hours before the simulacrum appears, he has gone missing. As Liebenstein ponders the meaning of Rema's doppleganger and how he can find the real Rema, he becomes increasingly obsessed with Tzvi Gal-Chen, believing that his meteorological publications contain instructions that will lead him to Rema. As Liebenstein becomes more and more part of the world Harvey has constructed, the reader must ask, what is the distance between patient and healer?

    A friend noted that the book calls into question everyone's perceptions of reality, and in a way that's true. For example, Rema and her mother have different opinions of what happened to Rema's father, both plausible, and neither woman seems delusional. Perhaps one of them is in denial, or perhaps they really don't know. Later, Rema's overheard telephone conversation reveals her perception of her husband, which differs from her mother's and probably his own.

    Galchen, herself a psychiatrist, writes with an ease and an eye for detail that draw the reader in. While the focus of the story is narrow and there are only a handful of characters, the writing is playful and smart. The reader delights in finding clues as to Liebenstein's behavior and personality and gaining insight into his character. And while we become frustrated with the errant doctor, his devotion to his wife and her real feelings for him keep us reading.

    I found myself exasperated and touched by Liebenstein. His dependence on Rema to ground him is apparent and he describes almost every woman he meets in comparison to Rema. He is also kindhearted in his own strange way, noting that it was wrong of him to leave the simulacrum without a word. His empathy towards her, all while refusing to accept her evidence that she is, in fact, the real Rema, is heartbreaking. Galchen's prose expresses his longing: "Her voice in the dark, so familiar-is was almost as if Rema was actually there with me, in the absence of luminosity, and maybe she really was there, paying me a visitation." Seeking Rema has become a kind of holy quest.

    Atmospheric Disturbances ends without resolving the questions it raises about Liebenstein's sanity, Harvey's strange reappearance, or the existence of Tzvi Gal-Chen. In another novel this might be unsettling, but in this case the beauty of the prose offers the completion that is lacking in the plot. A beautifully written, original debut.

    Review by Karen Duda

  • Nov 13, 2008
    By Tom, Dover, NH

    I slogged through this book on the basis of some good reviews. And then when I was ready to quit, I willed myself through the rest just to find out the answer to the mystery. Ha ha, no answer.

    This doesn't qualify as a spoiler since there isn't really an answer, but I'm pretty sure the narrator had a stroke and is suffering from a mental condition that makes for great non-fiction by Oliver Sacks, but does not make for great fiction by a different doctor. I was excited to read a book that continued the exploration of what it means to live in a narrative after just finishing Neal Stephenson's Anathem, but this wasn't it.

  • Sep 22, 2008
    By Nick, Tulsa, OK

    Such a unique debut. The ultimate example of the unreliable narrator. On the surface it's about a man who may or may not be going crazy, who may or may not be receiving instructions on how to live his life and how to look for his lost wife through years old meteorological journal entries and the New York Post. But it also explores Doppleganger phenomena, themes of love and loss, what it is to truly 'know' someone, to truly 'know' yourself, how we perceive/receieve information and different ways of computing said information. Lovely story. The suspension of disbelief is a must, but makes for an intriguing, and sometimes hilarious novel, if you are keen to do so.

See all reviews of Atmospheric Disturbances by Rivka Galchen