everyone in this room will someday be dead by Emily Austin
Choosing to explore the absurdities of every day life, Emily Austin offers a sometimes humorous and other times terrifying narrative through the voice of Gilda in everyone in this room will someday be dead. Gilda’s thoughts fill the pages with a reality that will make readers want to laugh so that they don’t cry. There is nothing delicate about this narrative, and yet the author has managed to portray Gilda’s expressions with a lightness that prevents the uncertainties of life from weighing on us. Gilda’s experiences begin when she takes on the secretarial position at a church previously occupied by a recently deceased older lady, prompting Gilda to make choices that ask us to consider how we can help others by just offering them our company. Quoted recommendations for the novel as they appear on the book’s front and back focus on the opportunity for readers to find humour within the novel. While I have no doubt that readers are likely to laugh at the descriptions offered by the novel’s narrator, Gilda, I think it is also important to examine the reality that the experiences Gilda recounts and the sentiments she expresses are more than real for many people. I know that reading this novel allowed me the opportunity to reflect on the possible effects of anxiety and depression in relation to every day actions, and I think that is part of what makes Austin’s work so beautiful—by making an often heavy subject appear lighter, that subject becomes more accessible and more likely to be discussed.
Taking the time to talk about stories, about their many facets and how we perceive them based on our previous experiences as readers is something that brings me great joy, it is the reason I chose to study literature, the reason I started writing this blog, and arguably one of the reasons I knew becoming an educator was the right choice for me. This novel was a gift from my sister, and in discussing the novel with her I was reminded of the importance of collaborating when attempting to disentangle the intricate themes we find in the best of stories. I invite readers to not only take on the challenge of choosing to read Emily Austin’s everyone in this room will someday be dead with a compassionate heart, but to take the time to share their understandings of the novel with a friend so that they are better able to appreciate the realities this novel reflects.
Readers should be aware that everyone in this room will someday be dead discusses issues which may be sensitive, including mental illness and substance use.