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Everything You Know [Paperback]

Zoe Heller (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 30, 2001
Willy Muller is an embittered writer of celebrity bios and an equal-opportunity misanthrope. At fifty, he has survived imprisonment for murdering his wife, years of venomous hate mail from the British public and, most recently, the suicide of his daughter Sadie. Willy needs a break, but he's not going to get it. While recuperating from a heart attack in a Mexican resort with his magnificently silly girlfriend Penny and his vodka-drenched friend Harry, Willy finds himself drawn into a troubling confrontation with the past. As he becomes engrossed in Sadie's tragic diaries, he reluctantly considers his chaotic family history and the notion that "only when you die do you run out of chances to be good."

With her scathing wit and brilliant ear for dialogue, Zoe Heller has created a darkly humorous story of love and loathing, sex and death, and filial relations gone horribly awry. Acidly funny and deeply affecting, "Everything You Know" marks the debut of a brilliant and immensely stylish young writer.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

"I am bad. A bad, bad man," Willy Muller tells us, and on first evidence the reader might be inclined to agree. A suspected murderer and a confirmed hack, the protagonist of Everything You Know is a Hollywood-style bottom feeder with no evident sense of shame. In London, years ago, Willy went to prison for killing his wife. Once released on appeal, he alienated his few remaining friends by writing a tell-all memoir of his married life before making the natural progression to churning out second-rate "sleb" bios. ("The crap just bubbles out of me, uncorrupted," Willy muses, half proud, half appalled. "Bad writing is my gift.") Did Willy kill his wife? Or did she hit her head in a fall? Either way, he is still alarmingly full of bile, raging against a world populated by "malignant dwarfs," "trolls," and "lipsticked ferrets." When his daughter kills herself using pills, Willy counts his blessings: after all, "Sadie might have done herself in in any number of vulgar or grotesque ways." The man even calls his dying German mother "Herr Kommandant"--to her face.

Temporarily shacked up in Puerto Vallarta with his girlfriend, a cosmetic surgery victim who wears "a perpetual expression of parched exhilaration," Willy takes his rage out on everyone around him, including himself. In fact, he waxes almost loving about his own physical decay--his skin with its "ancient, battered look of fried liver," ears with "a violet tinge at their curly edges, like exotic salad leaves," sagging belly gazing up at him "like an affectionate haggis." There are certainly pleasures to be found in this particular brand of literary nastiness, although Willy does pick some rather large and stationary targets: agents, facelifts, pretentious directors with German accents, and so on. Happily, debut novelist Zoe Heller has something larger in mind than the spectacle of a man savaging everything hateful in reach, and the book undergoes a subtle shift in tone midway through.

The medium is Sadie's diary, delivered to Willy's door four months after her death. Written in a style as straightforward and affecting as Willy's is blustering and cruel, it describes a childhood of Dickensian loneliness and an adult life ruled by a heartbreaking--and unsuccessful--search for love. At first Willy can't read without feeling "terrible, fluttery pains" in his gut. Later, however, the diary elicits what is--at least in Willy's terms--a kind of moral thaw. "Only when you die do you run out of chances to be good. Until then, there is always the possibility of turning yourself around," his accountant tells him, and amazingly, Willy pays heed. (Fortunately, for those of us who have come to enjoy his misanthropy, not too much heed; to the bitter end, he can't help noting of his former sister-in-law, "Boy, did her arse get big.") It's a mark of Heller's skill that we never stop caring about Willy, no matter how repulsive he seems; half victim, half perpetrator, half German, half Jew, he muddles through life with a moral passivity that might resemble our own. Everything You Know is a sharp, stylish, and wickedly funny first novel, but like its hero, it has real sadness concealed underneath. --Mary Park --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Willy Muller, the 55-year-old antihero featured in Heller's debut novel, is a hack journalist, absent father, convicted murderer and all-around unsavory character who must come to terms with his past when his teenage daughter Sadie commits suicide. Muller became estranged from Sadie and her older sister, Sophie, when he was imprisoned for murdering his wife and their mother, Oona. After being released on appeal, out of a job and desperate for cash, Muller wrote To Have and To Hold, a lurid confessional novel about his marriage and his wife's death. The book's publication earned him the scorn of friends and family, and Muller fled England for Los Angeles, leaving his two rebellious, emotionally damaged teenage daughters and pursuing a life of feeble ghostwriting and shallow society. The novel opens with Muller recuperating from a heart attack and reevaluating his life with the help of a box of Sadie's diaries, sent to him after her death. Reading the words of his ill-fated daughter, he can no longer deceive himself about his sorry behavior. Muller's intelligent, defensive and increasingly self-aware narration is counteracted poignantly by the heartbreaking voice of young Sadie as she tries, with little help from anybody, to cope with cruel boyfriends, her teen pregnancy and her own baby. Heller, formerly a New Yorker staff member and a contributing editor for Vanity Fair, pulls off this potentially heavy-handed story with great aplomb. She brings out the absurdities and hypocrisy in all the settings visited hereAlow-rent Hollywood, a resort town in Mexico and working-class London. A genuine but hilarious jerk, Muller abuses and offends a range of characters in all these locales, from his insipid girlfriend, Penny, to his vampiric agent, Art, to his surviving, conniving daughter, Sophie. But proving that faith can be just as interesting as cynicism, Heller gives her characters a few hard-earned moments of reckoning. (Jan.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Washington Square Press (January 30, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743411951
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743411950
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.3 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,761,452 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

15 Reviews
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My second Heller book - please Zoe, wrote more!, June 19, 2005
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Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Everything You Know (Paperback)
I read "What Was She Thinking?" and liked that one, so read this one. Completely different in style and the character is a rather unpleasant but fascinatingly wicked lug that I could not help but like while I found him pretty vulgar, and a bit funny at the same time.
I love this writing style. I like lots of dialog and little of the going on and on about the pattern in the wallpaper. Just a great read for me. I loved the way the daughter's letters and the action kept grapevining each other. I can't imagine anyone not liking this read - just a great read.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars terrific human drama in a tight package.., November 10, 2006
By 
lazza (Fort Lauderdale, Florida) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Everything You Know (Paperback)
'Everything You Know' reminds me a lot of works by William Boyd, one of my favorite authors, but with half the number of pages. :-) In it we have an older British ex-pat recounting his rather awful life. Wife dies in mysterious circumstances, estrangement with his kids/grandkids, and current career and social outlook is absolutely abysmal. The man is a mess, and he's not terribly likable. But what saves this book from being a frivolous soap opera are its terrific characterizations, and more than terrific prose ... the actual activity of reading 'Everything You Know' is a joy. I also greatly enjoyed her astute observations of American and British cultures; obviously the author is familiar with the ups and downs of both.


Bottom line: wonderful literary brain food. Not an unforgettable read, but strongly recommended reading nonetheless. (PS: her 'Notes on a Scandal' is even better.)
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars We Know But Just A Little, December 13, 2004
This review is from: Everything You Know (Paperback)
Willy Muller is one of those people you meet and think "Well, now isn't he a character?" You observe him and put him away in your mind, but he pops up from time to time, and you wonder and think about him more than you realize. In Zoë Heller's novel, "Everything You Know" we learn a lot about Willy. He could be a distasteful guy, but then, he is a lot like us in many ways.

Willy is in Mexico recuperating from a heart attack and trying to write a script of a celebrity's memoirs- somewhere there is writer's block and his agent has got him this place to stay and write it out. His girlfriend, Penny, one of those LA women, plastic surgerized and not too bright is with him. He receives a call from his sister in England that his "mutti" (mother) has died and off they go to his homeland. Willy left England with a shabby reputation. His wife, OOna died from striking her head on a fridge door during a domestic bout, and Willy was indicted for her murder. He was sent to prison but got out when he won his appeal. He has two daughters, both of whom believed he killed their mom. His youngest daughter took an overdose of pills and killed herself. Months after her death someone sent him her diaries. They are a compilation of her life- lonely with no mom or dad and no real place to live, looking for love and never really finding it. Reading these diaries gives Willy a chance to look at his own life and try to make some sense of it. While in England he visits his second daughter, but finds she is out for what she can get from him- money. His relatives have given up on him. It is really only Penny who believes in him, and she has no good reason, He has strung her along for a couple of years. He isn't even sure he likes her.

You would think that Willy is a person we wouldn't really like. But we do, he grows on us. He has become someone we care about. We learn more about him than he really wants us to know. He could be any man- warts and all. Willy has a chance to turn his life around. His heart attack has not changed his way of living, except he never wants to go back to that "dirty, filthy hospital, where no one would give him a bath." What is to become of Willy? Will Penny stay with him, will he realize how important she is to him?
Zoe Heller is one of those new authors that will be around for a while.
Highly recommended. prisrob
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
This afternoon, as I came awake from one of those thin, unrefreshing hospital naps, a strange woman was standing over my bed. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
aunt monika, aunt margaret
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Sissy Yerxa, Los Angeles, Hans Stempel, Puerto Vallarta, Pee Vee, Casa De La Luna, Reggie Boon, Mexico City, West Hollywood
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