2021-06-16
A woman travels to Spain to confront her traumatic past.
Arezu is 17 when she has an affair with Omar, her stepmother’s nephew. Affair is too strong a word; Omar is 40 years old, and Arezu doesn’t so much consent as she is compelled into a relationship with him. Twenty years later, she’s still trying to sort things out. That’s where Van der Vliet Oloomi’s latest novel picks up. Arezu returns to Spain to try to confront, or at least contend with, her past—and the lingering effects it has had on her life. “How does one document in language an experience of pain so totalizing that it refuses the fixed nature of words altogether?” she asks. Van der Vliet Oloomi’s strategy is to forgo plot—and most of the other conventions of fiction—in favor of a book-length monologue. Arezu considers not only her own past, but, more generally, racism, colonialism (her mother is Iranian, her father British), and Israeli-Palestinian politics—Arezu’s Israeli best friend joins her on her trip—among other things. The result can feel oddly claustrophobic, even solipsistic, as Arezu sorts through the seemingly infinite gradations of her feelings. The novel breathes when Arezu manages to step outside herself, to describe her brother, for instance, who was once beaten in a racist attack, or her friend, Ellie, who comes with her to Spain. Arezu’s trauma is real, but there is something self-indulgent about the way she turns the memories over and over in her mind. She seems to savor her own pain in a way that the author doesn’t seem fully aware of.
An intense but ultimately claustrophobic book in which a woman can’t get outside her own mind.
Most Anticipated Book of the Summer from Vulture, Refinery29, Lit Hub, and Hey Alma Most Anticipated Book of the Year from Harper's Bazaar, Lit Hub, and The Millions Most Anticipated Book of August from The A.V. Club, Bustle, vol. 1 Brooklyn, and Lambda Literary —
"A love story of the most fevered, brutal order...The prose is propulsive, erotic, and darkly dreamlike, recalling the early novels of Marguerite Duras...[SAVAGE TONGUES] interrogates the narratives we assign to the past and asks what we are allowed to expect of those who love us." — Vulture
"Not many writers can convey both great beauty and horror at the same time, but in Savage Tongues, Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi does so deftly...Oloomi works through questions of sex, friendship, trauma, and the obliteration of the self, with an inventive approach to time, setting, and character...Oloomi’s sentences, whether evoking pain or pleasure, are electric, filled with life. If I’m honest, when I was reading, I often wished I had written them. The imagery is filmic, and sometimes piercing." — Amina Cain, The Paris Review
"A novel of ideas...Though steeped in sex and haunted by fleshy frights...their exorcism is mostly a matter of language." — Washington Post
"Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi's stunning new novel is a hauntingly beautiful depiction of the way past traumas grip at our insides, threatening to tear us apart years after we've experienced them...Savage Tongues is rigorous in its exploration of the effects that violence and corruption have on our conception of ourselves." — Refinery 29
"This is a pulls-no-punches look at abandonment, ownership, trauma, and the convergence of political and personal pain. It is also a touching ode to friendship, a partial salve for these wounds." — Literary Hub
"Written with the intensity of early Duras and Ferrante’s Days of Abandonment...With the help of a dear friend, Arezu excavates and puts words to her past trauma in this novel about love, friendship, identity, and displacement." — The Millions
“A luxuriant fevered quest for reclamation, Savage Tongues is political, poetical, and spooky good.” — Joy Williams
“Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi’s Savage Tongues is an international novel careful to record the beauty of the natural world while also chronicling the harm people do to one another in this world. Van der Vliet Oloomi wants to know what we can expect of our families—our fathers, our lovers—when we are the same people who will wage war and destroy our planet in order to do so. This book is relentless in the best way." — Jericho Brown, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Tradition
“Against the gorgeous, punishing landscapes of Andalusia, the narrator of Savage Tongues relentlessly and movingly anatomizes the links between violence—both personal and systemic—and desire. This uncompromising novel lives at the border of memory and dream, restlessly seeking a logic that can transform cruelty into love.” — Garth Greenwell, author of Cleanness and What Belongs to You
"In Savage Tongues the immensely gifted Van der Vliet Oloomi describes a woman walking the razor thin line between memory and madness as she tries to rescue her younger self. Happily Arezu does not walk the line alone. This vivid account of the haunting nature of trauma is also a wonderful testimonial to friendship. A resonant and powerful novel." — Margot Livesey, New York Times-bestselling author of The Flight of Gemma Hardy and The Boy in the Field
"Compulsive...Van der Vliet Oloomi explores questions surrounding sexuality, agency, and displacement." — AV Club
"Savage Tongues touches all the bases—identity, sex, power, youth and age, the present and the past—and knocks it out of the park. Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi is our woke Marguerite Duras." — Francine Prose, author of Lovers at the Chameleon Club and Mister Monkey
"Azareen Van Der Vliet Oloomi is no stranger to accolades...And, boy oh boy, does she deserve every one of them. I will be anticipating anything she writes...Savage Tongues has drawn comparisons to Shirley Jackson and Samanta Schweblin for the way it keeps you suspended in a state of discomfort and hauntingly depicts a shattering of the self." — Literary Hub
"By turns brilliant, erotic and piercing, this third novel from PEN/Faulkner award-winner Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi shines new light into how historical oppression, both at a personal and societal level, continues to dominate our present-day thinking. Ostensibly a dissection of an exploitative relationship, the novel quickly broadens into a wide-ranging examination—and skewering—of master narratives around race, gender, sexuality and religion which dictate the way we live now...Van der Vliet Oloomi reflects the co-existence of pain and pleasure in lush descriptions of the southern Spanish landscape." — Asian Review of Books
"The past bears with it a harrowing capacity to disrupt lives...[Savage Tongues] follows one woman’s reckoning with her own past, and the larger context that suffuses the history she’s tried to leave behind." — vol. 1 Brooklyn
"In Savage Tongues, Van der Vliet Oloomi establishes herself as a skilled cartographer of trauma. With a remarkably clear vision and dynamic, colorful prose, she takes us along on her journey into the deepest recesses of an embattled mind. This is a book for those who expect from the novel far more than a story." — Amir Ahmadi Arian, author of Then The Fish Swallowed Him
“Savage Tongues breathes fresh life into ancient wounds, erasures, and annihilations. By mining transgressions—historical, sexual, bodily, and territorial—Van der Vliet Oloomi delivers a courageous book, as searing and terrifying as it is healing.” — Neda Maghbouleh, author of The Limits of Whiteness
"The boldness and bitter confidence of Oloomi’s writing, utterly immersed in language yet grasping something un-languageable, felt like a reminder of how powerful a text can be when it inhabits itself wholly, in all its contradictions and capaciousness." — Alexandra Kleeman, author of Something New Under the Sun