Louis & Louise
by
Julie Cohen
Publisher: Orion
Publication date: 29th January 2019
Pages: 304
RRP: $29.99
Format Read: Trade paperback
Source: Courtesy of Hachette Aus via Books on the Rail
If you could look at one life in two different ways, what would you see?
Louis and Louise are separated by a single moment in time, a strike of chance that decided their future. The day they were born is when their story begun.
In one, Louis David Alder is born a male.
In the other, Louise Dawn Alder is born a female.
Louis and Louise are the same in many ways - they have the same best friends, the same parents, the same dream of being a writer and leaving their hometown in Maine as soon as they can. But because of their gender, everything looks different.
Certain things will happen in their lives to shape them, hurt them, build them back up again. But what will bring them back home?
Louis and Louise are separated by a single moment in time, a strike of chance that decided their future. The day they were born is when their story begun.
In one, Louis David Alder is born a male.
In the other, Louise Dawn Alder is born a female.
Louis and Louise are the same in many ways - they have the same best friends, the same parents, the same dream of being a writer and leaving their hometown in Maine as soon as they can. But because of their gender, everything looks different.
Certain things will happen in their lives to shape them, hurt them, build them back up again. But what will bring them back home?
Cohen’s
idea of the same person living two lives, one as a female and one as a male simultaneously
is novel and intriguing.
Louise
Dawn Alder is born to Peggy and Irving Alder on 8th September 1978
and
Louis
David Alder is born to Peggy and Irving Alder on 8th September 1978.
In
the ensuing story the combined child is Lou. They pretty much do everything the
same; climbing, whistling, talking but slowly small differences start to emerge
by their 4th year. Lou is best friends with twins Allie and Benny
and it was interesting to see how the twin’s lives differed because of their
friend’s gender.
The
stories diverge at times and the chapters are headed by either Louise or Louis
and we see how their lives take different paths, even though their dreams were
very similar when they were younger, but it was not only Louis and Louise’s
life that was altered but also those of the people around them. Showing how
some choices have a domino effect, affecting others.
The
town of Casablanca and the Paper Mill have important parts in the story. The residents
of Casablanca, a small town in Maine, rely on the paper mill for their
livelihood, either working in the mill or providing services to mill workers.
The mill, owned my Lou’s grandfather is the lifeblood of the town but when the
workers strike it tears the town apart and creates a rift in the friendship of
Lou, Allie and Benny.
With
a main theme of gender Cohen also explores small town communities, death,
divorce, cancer clusters, love, pain and forgiveness.
A
unique concept and emotively written, certainly food for thought. Do you treat
your sons and daughters differently?
Content:
coarse language
sexual references
violent scenes
My rating: 4 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Julie Cohen studied at Brown University, earning a summa cum
laude degree with honours in English.
She moved to the UK to pursue a postgraduate degree in English Literature at the University of Reading and this was followed by a career teaching English at secondary level.
She has written twenty books, including the Richard and Judy Book Club pick Dear Thing. She lives with her husband, a guitar tech for rock bands, and their son in Berkshire, where she writes full time.
She moved to the UK to pursue a postgraduate degree in English Literature at the University of Reading and this was followed by a career teaching English at secondary level.
She has written twenty books, including the Richard and Judy Book Club pick Dear Thing. She lives with her husband, a guitar tech for rock bands, and their son in Berkshire, where she writes full time.