Blair's Reviews > I Have Some Questions For You

I Have Some Questions For You by Rebecca Makkai
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bookshelves: 2023-release, past-and-present, read-on-kindle, edelweiss

When I love a book, I sometimes find it very hard to write a review: I just want to scream incoherently about how great it is. When I hate a book, it can be equally difficult: I don’t want to waste energy on articulating my issues with it properly. It’s often the books in the grey areas in between that I find myself with the most to say about. I had a lot of problems with I Have Some Questions For You, but I also recognise that the fact I’m compelled to articulate them, examine them, is a form of praise, because this means I really want to engage with the book. I wanted to like it more than I do, and the following ‘review’ ought to be understood more as a series of notes in which I try to work through the reasons it didn’t work for me.

The narrator, Bodie Kane, is a successful podcaster in her early forties. As a teenager, she attended a prestigious boarding school, Granby, where she felt like an outsider. In their senior year, her popular roommate Thalia was murdered. The supposed killer – Omar, a young man who worked at the school as an athletic trainer – was convicted quickly, but the evidence was flimsy and there’s always been speculation about his guilt. When Bodie is invited back to the school to teach a course, she becomes newly obsessed with the case; through adult eyes, she sees something suspicious in Thalia’s close relationship with a music teacher. One of Bodie’s students decides to make her own podcast about Thalia’s death, opening up even more questions. Meanwhile, Bodie’s semi-estranged husband is accused of coercive behaviour by a younger ex-girlfriend, and her (Bodie’s) married lover seems to be growing distant. (Yes, there’s quite a lot going on.)

I was so looking forward to a version of the true-crime-podcast story from a writer as good as Rebecca Makkai, whose The Great Believers I adored, whose ‘The November Story’ is an all-time favourite. But I Have Some Questions For You is significantly undercooked as a thriller, and too overwhelmed by plot for it to be satisfying at the character development level. What it is, more than anything, is a #MeToo novel – a concept that seems baffling, dead in the water, in 2022, particularly after books like My Dark Vanessa and True Story have tackled similar subject matter so successfully.

There’s some value, I guess, in telling this type of story from the perspective of a watchful outsider, a person detached from the true harm, but frustratingly, the most interesting points thrown up by that are just not explored. There’s this moment where a woman, one of her former classmates, tells Bodie she was ‘safe’ from creepy adult men as a teen, with the obvious implication being that she (the younger Bodie) was too unattractive to be a target for them. And THAT’S interesting – both the idea itself, which is surely worth further discussion, and also the way this woman, who was a victim herself, so blithely throws it out there, assuming she’s right. Yet Bodie barely examines it!

Similarly, we’re shown how Bodie’s continuing attachment to her ‘outsider’ status leads her to place too much emphasis on what she endured at school – some bullying and mockery which, sure, is horrible, but hardly in the same league as being groomed by an abuser – while completely dismissing her husband’s accuser. The book never really gets into the hypocrisy of this. It’s like... we’re meant to see the irony, but nothing is done with it. Is this the whole point? That Bodie is a vulture, exploding the Thalia case to centre herself while ignoring situations in which she could truly make a positive impact? Certainly, the way Omar’s perspective is filtered through Bodie’s feels patronising. Almost the only way I can read the book favourably is to see Bodie as a (the?) villain, and though I’m sure she’s deliberately flawed, I doubt that’s the intention.

Bodie’s ruminations on how girls are conditioned to accept exploitation are not without merit, but they aren’t particularly fresh or interesting. My Dark Vanessa is so much more visceral; True Story achieves a more thought-provoking effect by varying its perspective and digging into how these stories get told; Death of a Bookseller and the Six Stories books engage more productively with questions around the ethics of true crime. Here, every seemingly intriguing idea is flattened into a hackneyed ‘There Is A Lot Of Misogyny’ message achieved through methods like the recital of a litany of faceless/nameless victims alongside details of what happened to them (a device I really cannot stand), or the anodyne horror of an adult woman realising that yes, a teacher sleeping with teenagers is Bad (who would have thought!!)

A lot of my problems with this book boil down to the fact that it feels like it is trying to Say Something, and what it is trying to Say is so stale, and – I realise this is completely unfair – what I wanted from Makkai was another meaty literary novel with some expansive subplot that shouldn’t be fascinating but is, like the art bequest thing in The Great Believers. There is a real art to writing a compelling crime/thriller narrative, and this is never more apparent than when a talented author of literary fiction doesn’t quite pull it off. This is not a bad book – it’s too well-written to be bad – but I think what I’ll remember about it is my frustration over the most promising parts of the narrative being squandered.

I received an advance review copy of I Have Some Questions for You from the publisher through Edelweiss.

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Reading Progress

October 26, 2022 – Started Reading
October 26, 2022 – Shelved
October 28, 2022 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-50 of 51 (51 new)


message 1: by Ilana (new) - added it

Ilana What a smart review. You really impressed me, and I came away thinking I should definitely read The Great Believers (been feeling guilty about never getting to that one) but probably not this one. Thanks.


Kellie Burke You articulated all of the jumbled thoughts I had about this book. It just didn’t quite meet the ambitious mark for me.


Laura Good, thought-provoking review, although I'm actually loving this. (I think what Bodie went through at school was pretty serious, though, and actually quite traumatic).


Ruth Excellent review! I wanted to love it more than I did. I loved My Dark Vanessa!


Kenzie Great review, sums up a lot of what I thought as well. I absolutely loved The Great Believers and was a bit disappointed with this one.


Sarah I finished the book moments ago and you perfectly summarized my impressions.


Jane Hammons I think your comment about it being "stale" is right on target. I felt while I was reading it that Bodie was supposed to be opening my eyes to things, and my reaction was, "seriously, do you think people don't know this?"


Rose Nail on the head. In addition, reading this as a woman of color who attended an ivy, I felt an additional layer of frustration with this book. If others read it with these caveats, I think it's a good book club read if you want to have substantive discussion on the nuance of me too and true crime and white privilege and bias.


Sara Poulos Excellent review


message 10: by Kate (new) - rated it 3 stars

Kate Really great review, you articulated much of what I felt about this book but couldn’t quite nail down


message 11: by Jim (new)

Jim Very intelligent and intriguing review. I am tiring of the #MeToo books, partly because the issue feels too simplified, and partly because few authors write the issue with any depth, edge, or nuance.


message 12: by Ika (new) - rated it 3 stars

Ika Willis There is a real art to writing a compelling crime/thriller narrative, and this is never more apparent than when a talented author of literary fiction doesn’t quite pull it off.

THIS! When I finished it I found myself shouting "Just write a melodrama if you want to write a melodrama - don't hedge it around with oh-but-the-whole-story-I'm-telling-is-so-problematic". (I too wanted to like it more than I did, and I also found part of the problem was Bodie as the narrator - reliable? unreliable? good? bad? Though I did feel like Makkai had included Jasmine Wilde as an example of someone who is straightforwardly wrong, and whose accusations deserve to be dismissed, so I thought she was much more on Bodie's side there than you did - but I also thought she was setting Bodie up as super unreliable about Dennis Bloch, and never quite resolved that.)


Marti Mart Thank you for this review! You elucidated everything that was swirling aroung my subconscious after reading this book. I was expecting a much better book from Makkai I think she could have pulled off the true crime/me too/multi unreliable narrators combo if the writing had not been so circular and amorphous. Maybe that was on purpose cause uh Bodie drinks...a lot?


Pamela Donnelly Plus it was sooo drawn out! I had been so excited to read it, and was disappointed with a bit. It was just too long for it to sputter out at the end like it did I was hoping maybe Fran did it!


message 15: by Amy (new) - rated it 2 stars

Amy Dunlap I wrote my review before reading yours and YES!


Christina I agree! Your review resonates with me. I wanted to love this (I thought The Great Believer was phenomenal) and had high expectations I guess. It was very readable but by the end it felt little drawn out and kind of preachy at times. The device where she cited examples of violence to women became a little too much for me by the end, like gratuitous and unnecessary.


Elisabeth Schulz Left me feeling dark and broody. Your review is well thought out and nailed a lot of what bothered me.


MsMaddyMax Thanks for your review! I found this too instructive and unsubtle, but worst of all, boring. I haven't read anything of hers before but have to assume that The Great Believers is far better.


K. Daley Thank you, Blair. I mostly thought the same as you, but couldn’t quite decide why before reading your review. Too bad, because The Great Believers was so good. To you review I would add over researched and suffering from some long wooden ruminations on Bodie’s part.


Aimee Truchan this review is excellent. putting it down at page 254. cannot get through it.


message 21: by Maxine (new) - added it

Maxine Bailey Thanx for nailing what is wrong & right about this book. I feel free to abandon now, knowing it will continue to irritate me.


Nancee Thank you from saving me from having to articulate my feelings and thoughts about this book. You summed it up much better than I could have. #whatshesaid


message 23: by Sara (new) - rated it 4 stars

Sara The audio was fantastic


Cortney I really had my hopes up with this one, and as I listened to the audio I thought for sure I would be sucked in. However, I wasn't. I kept trying, I respect and admire many of the problematic topics that were addressed but it was too much under the guise of murder mystery/true crime. You articulated my thoughts so much better than I ever could have! Thank you.


message 25: by Judy (new) - rated it 5 stars

Judy I had a different experience than you did with this book but I found your review interesting and provocative.


message 26: by Tabbi (new) - added it

Tabbi This is similar to I felt reading the book.


Claire Talbot You articulated how I felt much better than I could myself - thank you!


Terri Loeffler I just finished it, and I was perplexed how I felt about it. I loved The Great Believers and The Hundred Year House, but I was strangely dissatisfied with this book. Thank you for vocalizing what I couldn’t come up with. You are spot on. 🙂


Justine Same sentiments exactly!


Amanda McGahee Agree 100%; I wanted so much more!


Barbara I agree; this articulates so well all that I disliked about this book. The first quarter of the book had promise, but I was so sick of it by the last quarter that I just slogged through hoping she’d remedy things by the end. :/ It honestly just got even worse.


Lucy Randall This is exactly how I feel!


Walker Yes, agree with this 100%!


Morgan I had the exact same issues with this book


message 35: by Jen (new)

Jen That first paragraph is so relatable


message 36: by Manat (new)

Manat Wooten Agreed.


message 37: by BB (new)

BB Really solid review. This was one I closed and thought “Hmm” but didn’t know what to say. I think people who walk into this expecting a thriller will be disappointed — it isn’t one in any respect, but it also really isn’t a mystery in the genre sense. It’s a literary mystery (which they often market as literary thrillers, which o hate) and so far I haven’t seen one that gets plot down solidly as literary writers never focus on it


Chrissy I agree with everything except that I believe it IS a bad book. It's like I went to high school with Rebecca. Who needs it?


message 39: by Gail (new) - rated it 3 stars

Gail I agree with everyone. The book didn’t work and it was way way too long for what it tried to accomplish!


Eliza Pillsbury YESSS yes yes yes YES thank you


Marni I read this right after Mad Honey which was as a crime novel totally worked. But the writing isn’t as good as this one. I agree with all of it.


message 42: by Renee (new)

Renee Wallace What an articulate review! Thank you. I closed the book, miserable with disappointment in my wasted time. Now I know why.


Sarah  Gilbert Couldn’t agree more! So disappointed after The Great Believers; a book I still think about years later. This was such a let down


Eileen You nailed all the issues on the head of why I did not like this book. I was so let down :(


Ibelis Melendez I have it a 2. I agree with your review . Spot on


Karlee C You articulated my thoughts perfectly


Laurie F. Ackell Was so excited for this book! I loved The Great Believers so much - I had to force myself to finish this one. I struggled to keep track of all the numerous high schoolers Bodie was acquainted with and the inclusion of the whole “MeToo” theme added a level that really didn’t seem necessary. I was ready for a meaty thriller and was left disappointed. I did rate it a 4 as I appreciate Makkai’s style.


message 48: by Amy (new) - rated it 5 stars

Amy Thanks for referencing her other books you preferred. I will check them out as well.


message 49: by J (new) - rated it 5 stars

J R I hear your objections, but what I like about the book is the open-ended nature of the “stale” topics. There is such division in our society over being ‘woke’ v ‘cancel culture’, that presenting a white woman who was raised in a racist, patriarchal system coming to see inequalities slowly (because, let’s be honest, many never will) opens a door for a much-needed discussion in a safer way for many. When people seem to isolate in divergent camps, having a bridge that might open minds is needed in literature.


Jennifer I appreciate your review, and the point you make about Bodie’s outsider-ness is exactly why I loved it so much. She was just as much a part of the story as anyone else, but she felt like she didn’t deserve to be, and as such could only engage through the lens of podcaster. I think there’s a layer of imposter syndrome when it comes to the #MeToo movement and that’s what I thought one of “the messages” of this book was, and for me, it was quite effective.


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