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3.5 

Dogs at the Perimeter: A Novel

By Madeleine Thien
Dogs at the Perimeter: A Novel by Madeleine Thien digital book - Fable

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Publisher Description

The second novel by the Man Booker Prize shortlisted author Madeleine Thien is "beautiful, deeply moving, [and] addresses universal questions" (Independent).

Set in Cambodia during the regime of the-Khmer Rouge and in present day Montreal, Dogs at the Perimeter tells the story of Janie, who as a child experiences the terrible violence carried out by the Khmer Rouge and loses everything she holds dear. Three decades later, Janie has relocated to Montreal, although the scars of her past remain visible. After abandoning her husband and son and taking refuge in the home of her friend, the scientist Hiroji Matsui, Janie and Hiroji find solace in their shared grief and pain—until Hiroji’s disappearance opens old wounds and Janie finds that she must struggle to find grace in a world overshadowed by the sorrows of her past.

Beautifully realized, deeply affecting, Dogs at the Perimeter evokes the injustice of tyranny through the eyes of a young girl and draws a remarkable map of the mind’s battle with memory, loss, and the horrors of war. It confirms Madeleine Thien as one of the most gifted and powerful novelists writing today.

Finalist for the International Literature Prize and the Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction
A Canada Reads Top Forty Book
A Globe and Mail Best Book

47 Reviews

3.5
“I always seem to struggle when reading books like this, based in some horrific historical trauma that goes beyond individual consciousness into a collective psyche, and wars and genocides are a part of that. Dogs at the Perimeter is one of those stories focusing on the Khmer Rouge’s brutality in Cambodia, and the long-lasting effects it had on generations of people in a diaspora around the world. Clearly Janie, the main character (if you can really call her that) has trauma that she has never discussed and never processed, and it infects her life with her family, her coworkers, her whole world around her. In that sense I can understand how and why Madeleine Thien chose to write this novel in such a fragmented way, to illustrate how memories and traumas are interpreted years afterward. But it doesn’t work in a practical sense: it is too disconnected, too fragmented, too abstract in places, and at some point—while I can appreciate the attempt to imitate what the brain really does, especially as Janie’s own career in the book focuses on similar topics—you still have to be able to convey it in a cohesive fashion, and Thien never really accomplishes that. It was confusing and very hard to follow the entire way through.”

About Madeleine Thien

Madeleine Thien is the author of four books, including Do Not Say We Have Nothing, which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. Her work has appeared in The New Yorker, Granta, The New York Review of Books, and elsewhere. She lives in Montreal.

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