Current:Home > Stocks'People Collide' is a 'Freaky Friday'-type exploration of the self and persona -TrueNorth Capital Hub
'People Collide' is a 'Freaky Friday'-type exploration of the self and persona
View
Date:2025-04-12 18:21:54
Isle McElroy's sophomore novel, People Collide, begins with a literal save-the-cat trope, used to delightfully deliberate effect.
Originating as the title of a popular screenwriting book by Blake Snyder, "save the cat" refers to the idea that a narrative should establish the likeability of its main character — by having them, for example, save a cat that's stuck in a tree — early in the text so that the audience is on board with that character's coming adventure.
"Each day," McElroy's narrator Eli explains on the novel's first page, "is a chance to discard your most pitiable habits and selves...When I stepped outside into the grand street in front of my apartment complex, I found, before me, a chance to become someone better: a hero. A cat lay dead in the street, splayed on the pavement in front of a dumpster. A kitten." Eli, who is hoping to at least place the dead cat in the dumpster, runs upstairs to get a plastic bag and comes back to pick up the dead kitten — only to discover the kitten wasn't dead at all but only sleeping. Has he saved the cat, then? Or has he merely proven to the reader that he wants to be the kind of person who could? Regardless, the introduction to Eli via this anecdote heightens the self-awareness present throughout People Collide that strengthens the funny, self-deprecating, and terribly insecure narrator.
Eli is married to Elizabeth — her name nearly encompassing his — and is living with her in Bulgaria where she's completing a fellowship in which she "led lessons on American culture for teenagers who, even at their most invested, found her indoctrinating lessons taxing and ridiculous." But she's a writer, really, and so is Eli, although they have very different approaches to their creative endeavors.
The plot really kicks off when Eli arrives at Elizabeth's workplace to discover that people are addressing him as if he's his wife. When he finally realizes that he is, indeed, inside Elizabeth's body, he understandably freaks out and spends several days at home trying to figure out what's going on. He assumes, correctly it turns out, that just as he's inside Elizabeth's body, she must be inside his, but he can't find her or his own body anywhere — and she's not answering his cell phone, which she presumably has with her. If the dynamics of the married couple's genders confuses you here, that's because they're supposed to.
Indeed, witnessing Eli try to figure out how to navigate the world in his wife's body is fascinating. Tempting as it might be to draw a neat line between discovering one's trans identity and Eli's experience of uncomfortable embodiment, that isn't what's going on here, at least not at first. Eli is frankly unnerved by his access to his wife's body's sexuality in this way — from within rather than without — and doesn't attempt to explore her physicality in that way. Instead, he tries to individuate himself: "I liked the idea of doing something Elizabeth wouldn't. If I were going to be her, then I may as well be her on my terms. I occupied a space where neither she nor I seemed to exist, free from the expectations of our personalities."
What becomes clear over the course of the novel is that Eli's discomfort within Elizabeth, this new way of navigating the world as her, stems from a deep dislike of, and fundamental misunderstanding of, himself. Like most of us, Eli can't tell what first impressions people have of him. He perceives himself as awkward, lazy, a deadbeat who isn't nearly good enough for his striving and overachieving wife. Their class backgrounds are different as are their families, and Eli can't run from those realities; they remain a part of his psychology despite his new body. As the saying goes, no matter where you go, there you are.
When he finally finds Elizabeth, Eli is struck by their differences in inhabiting each other's bodies: "Elizabeth appeared at ease in my body in ways that I'd never been. She proceeded confidently, and I envied her, not only because I struggled to make sense of her body but because it seemed unfair that she might be a better version of me than I'd ever been." It's only upon meeting Elizabeth in Eli's body that readers get to see what it is that she loves about him, as he's spent much of the novel up to that point cataloguing his flaws. But she does love him, as much as he loves her, but neither of them has an easy time loving each other.
Ultimately, People Collide's Freaky Friday concept covers a deep exploration of marriage, love, and the ways we know one another — and don't — as well as how slippery a sense of self can be when so much of how we navigate the world depends on how it sees us.
Ilana Masad is a fiction writer, book critic, and author of the novel All My Mother's Lovers.
veryGood! (55176)
Related
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Encore: Tempe creates emergency response center to be a climate disaster refuge
- The wildfires burning in the Southwest are bad but 'not unprecedented'
- Bonus Episode: Consider the Lobstermen
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Max's Harry Potter TV Adaptation Will Be a Decade-Long Series With J.K. Rowling
- The Work-From-Home climate challenge
- The SEC wants companies to disclose how climate change is affecting them
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Tori Spelling and Dean McDermott Put on United Front in Family Photo With Their Kids
Ranking
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Katie Holmes Shares Rare Insight Into Daughter Suri Cruise's Visible Childhood
- A Canadian teen allegedly carved his name into an 8th-century Japanese temple
- Ukrainian troops near Bakhmut use Howitzers from U.S. to pin Russians in a trap
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Get ready for another destructive Atlantic hurricane season
- Nepal tourist helicopter crash near Mount Everest kills 6 people, most of them tourists from Mexico
- Oceans are changing color, likely due to climate change, researchers find
Recommendation
Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
How much energy powers a good life? Less than you're using, says a new report
Nepal tourist helicopter crash near Mount Everest kills 6 people, most of them tourists from Mexico
Could the world become too warm to hold Winter Olympics?
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
Matthew McConaughey Recalls Scary Plane Incident With Wife Camila Alves
China executes kindergarten teacher convicted of poisoning students
Love Island Host Maya Jama Addresses Leonardo DiCaprio Dating Rumors