Modeled on Dante's
Divine Comedy and riffing on Proust's
In Search of Lost Time,
Iris Has Free Time is a subtle, complicated, funny, bold, lyrical and literary, sad and wise book about youth, time, and what it means to grow up. An instant classic and essential reading for anyone who has ever been young.
There, I came across a cluster of NYU graduates standing in cap and gown. They were laughing and posing for photos. Was it June again already? Their voices echoed through the subway tunnel. Congratulations!’ Congratulations!’ their parents said. And I wanted to yell, Don’t do it! Go back! You don’t know what it’s like!’”
Whether passed out drunk at
The New Yorker where she’s interning; assigning
Cliffs Notes when hired to teach humanities at a local college; getting banned from a fleet of Greek Island ferries while on vacation, or trying to piece together the events of yet another puzzling blackoutI prefer to call them pink-outs, because I’m a girl”Iris is never short on misadventures. From quarter-life crisis to the shock of turning thirty, Iris Has Free Time charts a madcap, melancholic course through that curious ageone’s twentieswhen childhood is over, supposedly.
Fresh out of college and on her own in Manhattan, Smyles narrates an exuberant, comic, and wistful picaresque about trying to grow up late. A touching evocation of youth in its twilight, "Iris Has Free Time" is a paean to the beauty, sadness and joys of youth.
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