
Lisa Harding (Bright Burnings Things; Cloud Girls) will haunt readers with the psychological drama of The Wildelings, a compulsively readable novel in which a woman looks back on her college days and a long-lost friendship.
Jessica is introduced as she begins therapy, newly divorced, in her 40s. The novel's inciting event, however, is not divorce but a new play by an old acquaintance. Asked by her therapist to write down her memories and "start at the beginning," Jessica recalls her first year at Dublin's Wilde College and "The Unholy Quintet: Mark, Linda, Jonathan, Jacques, and me."
Linda had been Jessica's best friend since childhood. When the underprivileged, underparented pair achieves surprising slots at the "pretentious arty" college, Jessica is highly ranked for her beauty as well as her acting prowess; Linda, as ever, dwells in the shadows. But just as Jessica enters a charged relationship with the sexy Jacques, Linda finds love with Mark, a magnetic fourth-year playwright and director, after a false start with golden boy Jonathan. The older student's grasp on the group tightens, especially after Mark casts Jessica in what he claims will be a breakout play. Mark proves treacherously adept at directing the people around him, on and off the stage.
Harding gives Jessica a self-excoriating, incisive, bitter, and evocative first-person voice. The Wildelings' inexorable plot is like the proverbial train wreck: shocking, electric, impossible to turn from. Its psychological tumult verges on horror. With this atmospheric roller coaster of a novel, Harding offers pulsing intensity, gut-wrenching emotional upheaval, and high drama in every sense. --Julia Kastner, blogger at pagesofjulia