The Panopticon: A Novel
The Panopticon: A Novel book cover

The Panopticon: A Novel

Hardcover – Deckle Edge, July 23, 2013

Price
$28.86
Format
Hardcover
Pages
304
Publisher
Hogarth
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0385347860
Dimensions
6.53 x 1.1 x 9.51 inches
Weight
1.3 pounds

Description

From Booklist *Starred Review* Anais Hendricks, the tough, fiery 15-year-old at the center of Fagan’s first novel, has grown up in the foster care system in England. Abandoned by her mother, who gave birth to her in a mental institution, Anais has been bounced around ever since the murder of Theresa, a compassionate prostitute and the only mother figure Anais has ever known. Anais is brought to the Panopticon, a halfway house for truant teens, after she’s accused of brutally beating a police officer and leaving her in a coma. Anais, who was hopped up on drugs at the time, can’t remember whether she’s guilty or not. The police are gunning for her, determined to send Anais to juvenile detention until she’s 18. At the Panopticon, Anais is convinced she’s being watched as part of a sinister experiment, the purpose of which, she believes, is to try to bring her down and all but eradicate her from society. Told in Anais’ raw voice, Fagan’s novel peers into the world inhabited by forgotten children, and, in Anais, gives us a heartbreakingly intelligent and sensitive heroine wrapped in an impossibly impenetrable exterior. Readers won’t be able to tear themselves away from this transcendent debut. --Kristine Huntley Named one of Granta 's Best of Young British NovelistsShortlisted for The Desmond Elliott AwardShortlisted for The James Tait Black PrizeShortlisted for the Dundee International Book Prize “Fagan has created a feisty, brass-knuckled yet deeply vulnerable heroine, who feels like sort of a cross between Lisbeth Salander, Stieg Larsson’s 'Girl With the Dragon Tattoo,' and one of Irvine Welsh’s drug-taking Scottish miscreants from 'Trainspotting' or 'Skagboys.' Her novel is by turns gritty, unnerving, exhausting, [and] ferocious...A deeply felt and genuinely affecting novel.” — Michiko Kakutani, New York Times “Fagan has given us one of the most spirited heroines to cuss, kiss, bite and generally break the nose of the English novel in many a moon…there is no resisting the tidal rollout of Fagan’s imagery. Her prose beats behind your eyelids, the flow of images widening to a glittering delta whenever Anais approaches the vexed issue of her origins… vive Jenni Fagan...whose next book just moved into my ‘eagerly anticipated’ pile.”— Tom Shone, New York Times Book Review “[Fagan] grew up in what’s euphemistically called ‘the care system,’ and she writes about these young people with a deep sympathy for their violently disordered lives and an equally deep appreciation of their humor and resiliency…[Fagan has a] rousing voice, with its roundly rendered Scottish accent.”— Ron Charles, Washington Post "A classic coming-of-age tale."— Boston Globe “Fagan’s style calls to mind fellow Scottish writer Anthony Burgess, whose novel A Clockwork Orange used similar lexicographic liberties to reinforce a theme of teenage dystopia” — The Daily Beast “[A] terrific portrait of a young criminal…Fagan makes this ugly life somehow beautiful.”— Alan Cheuse, NPR " The Panopticon [is] a terrifically gritty and vivid debut.” — Cleveland Plain Dealer “She’s Oliver, with a twist. Anais Hendricks, 15, and the female protagonist of poetess Fagan’s first novel, cuts right to the chase as she chronicles the modern British foster care system.” — New York Post “The Panopticon is like its protagonist: tough as old boots and always ready with the fists, but likely to steal your heart if you’ll just slow down and listen.”— National Post “Fagan creates a complex and vulnerable character…[and] even though Anais makes it hard for you to love her, you can’t help wishing her out of her plight and cheering her upward.” — Bust (four stars) "The Panopticon is an exquisite first novel--Jenni Fagan has created a dark, disturbing, yet ultimately hopeful portrait of a young woman growing up alone in the Scottish foster care system. xa0To say it is haunting is an understatement--I kept wanting to set a place for Anais at the table with the rest of my children."— Vanessa Diffenbaugh, New York Times bestselling author of The Language of Flowers "Jenni Fagan has created a high-resolution portrait of a throwaway kid. Fifteen-year-old Anais, born in a mental ward, tumbled through the social work system, violated and violent, high on whatever, each decision she makes is a jaunty wave as she sails past the next point of no return. This is a contemporary tragedy of the highest order." — Carol Anshaw, New York Times bestselling author of Carry the One “In the Margaret Atwood/ The Handmaid’s Tale vein—very literary and suspenseful. I like books set in an altered reality—one that feels familiar and yet also deeply unfamiliar, that embodies some of the dailiness of life, and yet slowly reveals itself to be a very different, much more sinister place.”— Gillian Flynn, Oprah.com "With The Panopticon , Fagan makes Foucault proud and readers ecstastic. This is why we read.xa0You'll begin wanting to save Anais Hendricks but finish wondering if, and how, she's managed to save you."— Tupelo Hassman, author of Girlchild "Jenni Fagan is the real thing, and The Panopticon is a real treat: maturely alive to the pains of maturing, and cleverly amused as well as appalled by what it finds in the world." -Andrew Motion "Ferocious and devastating, The Panopticon sounds a battle-cry on behalf of the abandoned, the battered, and the betrayed. To call it a good novel is not good enough: this is an important novel, a book with a conscience, a passionate challenge to the powers-that-be. Jenni Fagan smashes every possible euphemism for adolescent intimacy and adolescent violence, and she does it with tenderness and even humour. Hats off to Jenni Fagan! I will be recommending this book to everyone I know." -Eleanor Catton, author of The Rehearsal "This is a wonderful book – gripping and brilliant. Anais’s journey will break your heart and her voice is unforgettable. Bursting with wit, humanity and beauty as well as an unflinching portrayal of life as a ‘cared for’ young adult, this book will not let you go." -Kate Williams "Best debut novel I've read this year." -Irvine Welsh "Uncompromising and courageous...one of the most cunning and spirited novels I’ve read for years. The story of Anais, a fifteen-year-old girl blasting her way through the care-home system while the system in turn blasts her away to nothing, looks on the surface to be work of a recognizable sort, the post-Dickensian moral realism/fabulism associated with writers like Irvine Welsh. But Fagan’s narrative talent is really more reminiscent of early Camus and that this novel is a debut is near unbelievable. Tough and calm, electrifying and intent, it is an intelligent and deeply literary novel which deals its hope and hopelessness simultaneously with a humaneness, both urgent and timeless, rooted in real narrative subtlety."– Ali Smith, TLS – books of the year "If you’re trying to find a novel to engage a determinedly illiterate teenager, give them this one. Anais, the 15-year-old heroine and narrator, has a rough, raw, joyous voice that leaps right off the page and grabs you by the throat…This punkish young philosopher is struggling with a terrible past, while battling sinister social workers. Though this will appeal to teenagers, the language and ideas are wholly adult, and the glorious Anais is unforgettable." – The Times "[A] confident and deftly wrought debut… The Panopticon is an example of what Martin Amis has called the “voice novel”, the success of which depends on the convincing portrayal of an idiosyncratic narrator. In this Fagan excels…Her voice is compellingly realised. We cheer her on as she rails against abusive boyfriends and apathetic social workers, her defiance rendered in a rich Midlothian brogue." – Financial Times "The most assured and intriguing first novel by a Scottish writer that I have read in a decade, a book which is lithely and poetically written, politically and morally brave and simply unforgettable…Anais’s voice is an intricate blend of the demotic and the hauntingly lyrical…There are moments which are genuinely distressing to read, which return the reader to a painful sense of how mindlessly and unspeakable cruel people can be. But it is marbled with cynical, smart comedy…Fagan is exceptionally skilful with bathos, a notoriously difficult literary register; here, however, it manages to be funny and heart-breakingly tender at the same time…Naturalistic and pleasingly oblique. Life, as Stevenson said, is “infinite, illogical, abrupt and poignant”. To render this novelistically is a rare achievement…The Panopticon appeals to writers since in some ways the novelist is the prison’s arch-overseer, able to look into the minds of the characters. But that comes with a duty: to keep your eyes open even when you’d rather shut them. Fagan is gloriously open-eyed about immaturity, maturity, sexuality, crime, dispossession and more. Her ability to capture the cross-currents of language, the impersonations of consciousness, is admirable…As a debut, The Panopticon does everything it should. It announces a major new star in the firmament." – Stuart Kelly, Scotsman "[The narrator] is engagingly drawn by Fagan, who has created a character possessed of intellectual curiosity and individual quirks…Written with great verve…Fagan has a clear voice, an unflinching feel for the complexity of the teenage mindset, and an awareness of the burden we impose on children…What’s intriguing here – particularly in a Scottish fiction landscape that can display too much of the plodding everyday – is her effort to lift the story of teen misadventure into a heightened realm of intellectual aspiration and quasi-sci-fi notions of sinister social change." – Scotland on Sunday "What Fagan depicts in her debut novel, The Panopticon , is a society in which people don't just fall through the net – there is no net…Fagan is writing about important stuff: the losers, the lonely, most of them women. [Anais] maintains a cool, smart, pretty, witty and wise persona." – Guardian "Reminiscent of Girl, Interrupted …The novel is as bold, shocking and intelligent as its central character…The institutional details (magnolia walls, screwed-down chairs) anchor The Panopticon in realism, giving it a greater bite. Much of Anais’ life is the stuff of tabloid shock stories and The Panopticon ’s strength lies in giving you an insight into the lonely, damaged girl behind the headlines…This week’s winner." – Stylist "An indictment of the care system, this dazzling and distinctive novel has at its heart an unstoppable heroine…Fagan’s prose is fierce, funny and brilliant at capturing her heroine’s sparky smartness and vulnerability…Emotionally explosive."– Marie Claire "Fagan's writing is taut and controlled and the dialogue crackles." – The Herald This is the best debut I’ve read this year...and all because of the character of Anais, who is one of the best narrators I have ever come across.xa0 An essential read."– Living North “Anais’s story is one of abandonment, loss, and redemption, well suited for a paranoid age in which society finds itself constantly under the microscope.” – Publishers Weekly “Dark and disturbing but also exciting and moving, thanks to a memorable heroine and vividly atmospheric prose…Fagan [paints] her battered characters’ fierce loyalty to each other with such conviction and surprising tenderness.”— Kirkus Reviews “Told in Anais’ raw voice, Fagan’s novel peers into the world inhabited by forgotten children, and, in Anais, gives us a heartbreakingly intelligent and sensitive heroine wrapped in an impossibly impenetrable exterior. Readers won’t be able to tear themselves away from this transcendent debut.” – Booklist (starred review) "Anais's ongoing internal dialog, her periodic reimagining of her life and situation, is enthralling...James Kelman's How Late It Was, How Late meets Ken Kesey's One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest . Not to be missed." – Library Journal (starred review) JENNI FAGAN was born in Livingston, Scotland. She graduated from Greenwich University and won a scholarship to the Royal Holloway MFA. A published poet, she has won awards from Arts Council England, Dewar Arts and Scottish Screen among others. She has twice been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, was shortlisted for the Dundee International Book Prize, and was named one of Granta 's Best of Young British Novelists in 2013. The Panopticon is her first novel. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • An Amazon Best of the Year pick and named one of NPR,
  • Library Journal,
  • and Flavorwire's Best of 2013 novels,
  • THE PANOPTICON is a dazzling debut by one of
  • Granta
  • ’s Best Young British Novelists
  • Anais Hendricks, fifteen, is in the back of a police car. She is headed for the Panopticon, a home for chronic young offenders. She can't remember what’s happened, but across town a policewoman lies in a coma and Anais’s school uniform is covered in blood.  Raised in foster care from birth and moved through twenty-three placements before she even turned seven, Anais has been let down by just about every adult she has ever met. Now a counter-culture outlaw, she knows that she can only rely on herself. And yet despite the parade of horrors visited upon her early life, she greets the world with the witty, fierce insight of a survivor.  Anais finds a sense of belonging among the residents of the Panopticon – they form intense bonds, and she soon becomes part of an ad hoc family. Together, they struggle against the adults that keep them confined. When she looks up at the watchtower that looms over the residents though, Anais knows her fate: she is an anonymous part of an experiment, and she always was. Now it seems that the experiment is closing in.Named one of the best books of the year by the
  • Times Literary Supplement
  • and the
  • Scotsman
  • ,
  • The Panopticon
  • is an astonishingly haunting, remarkable debut novel. In language dazzling, energetic and pure, it introduces
  • us to a heartbreaking young heroine and an incredibly assured and outstanding new voice in fiction.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(250)
★★★★
25%
(208)
★★★
15%
(125)
★★
7%
(58)
23%
(192)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Good book

Well written, interesting concept, would recommend to friends
10 people found this helpful
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Cannae finish. Dark, with limited scope, and unlikable characters

I was truly looking forward to reading what, to me, sounded like a young adult dystopian. What I got instead was a grim, labored, and somewhat tedious account of the end of the road detention system for youths strung out to dry. Whether or 'nae' these teens are redeemable isn't the point - the fact of the matter is that, due to drug abuse, criminal behavior, or the butt end of a broken foster care system, society is done with these kids. The Panopticon is where childhood is permanently left behind.

A lot of this could have been interesting, from a certain point of view, if the writing 'wasnae' so dense. Cannae read this for an entire novel? Donae want tae? Seriously. There's a Scottish lilt. I get that. Enough, author. It might be a world-building device, but it's also irritating.

In addition to the points above, the protagonist isn't much fun to be around. The first person POV gives the reader a very limited scope. I felt as oppressed as Anais, trying to make sense of her unpleasant world.

This is probably a good piece of literature and worthy of adulation, shining a piercing light into a normally dark corner of society. It's just not the kind of escapist writing I can lose myself into for entertainment.

In any case, I cannae make meself finish this novel. Two stars. Recommended only if you enjoy literature of this type.
7 people found this helpful
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Honestly, it gave me a headache.

I really do my best to finish all the books I am sent to review, but every once in a while I come across a book that I just cannot bear to read until the bitter end.

Regardless of the accolades and praise that have been apparently been showered on this book, I find it very difficult to read, as in more than a few pages at a time had me reaching for the non-aspirin pain relievers. The almost constant use of what appears to be Scottish slang (pish, spraffing, etc), street talk, and the four letter word that begins with F made it quite difficult to focus on the actual story, which is about a female juvenile delinquent that is accused of attacking a policewoman and causing possibly fatal injuries. Anais could probably be a character that would cause us to sympathize with her, as from what I was able to understand she had an awful life, being moved from foster homes, and orphanages multiple times in her 15 years.

Although I love reading about books set in other countries and frequently read mysteries set in the UK, I honestly cannot recommend this book
2 people found this helpful
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The best

I loved this book. Jenni Fagan is an incredible writer. This is a work of great talent, skill, and a hard-won heart and soul. I don’t know what Fagan’s background is, and it doesn’t matter, because she is the f234ing bomb. You can imagine wherever she came from and regardless, I think she’s a genius. To be able to put this together - with all the Scottish street-wise language and tough foster home upbringing and related violence, drugs, abuse - is just incredible.

I almost put this down at the beginning. It isn’t an easy read at first. But I suggest giving it a try, because it will pull you in. And even though the material is rough, there is a heart and soul here that won’t let you down. For some reason I think of Leslie Marmon Silko’s “Ceremory” and “Flight” by Sherman Alexie. Native American, but I think there are some parallels there, and of course the shared soul and love intertwined with pain and loss and hopefully coming out ahead.
2 people found this helpful
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Not for me

I won this book in exchange for an honest review.

And honestly I was truly disappointed in it and didn't finish it.

I believe I had the wrong impression of the book. I was expecting more of a dystopian, sci-fi fantasy read. What I got was a difficult to read (partly due to the use of Scottish slang), depressing narrative on the evils of the Scottish (or any countries)foster care system.

The novel's protagonist, Anais Hendricks, had no redeeming quality. I felt bad feeling that way because she is obviously a victim of an ill managed system in which she didn't really have any chance of coming out on top. The young girl is a drug addicted, potentially dangerous, apathetic teenager. Would she have turned out this way if she was in a stable, loving environment? Who knows and honestly I didn't care.

I was also put off by the amount of profanity in the novel. Without exaggeration every page I had read of the novel had at least 2 instances of the "f" word in it. I'm no prude, but feel profanity should be used as a means of enhancing an emotional part of a dialogue. The author's liberal use of this type of language should give the reader an indication of the type of book they are reading.

The novel is infused with anger, violence and hopelessness. Yes Jenni Fagan creates a realistic, cautionary tale of the injustices suffered by these young victims. However, the subject matter just was not what I was looking for.
2 people found this helpful
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Hauntingly disturbing and brlliant

This is a hauntingly disturbing and brilliant debut novel. Others have made comparisons to Girl Interrupted, but I was reminded of A Clock Work Orange and Never Let Me Go. The difference being that this is not some dystopian fantasy but rather a penetrating critique of contemporary society -- one that paradoxically maintains a ubiquitous gaze and ignorance of the most vulnerable among us. The novel's heroine, Anais Hendricks, is a literary offspring of Lisbeth Sandler, i.e., a saintly soul mistakenly labeled a psychopath. But is not she but society that needs to be exorcised.
2 people found this helpful
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If you're into Scot-speak

I umnay care for dialogue where I gonnae read dialect in nearly every sentence.
From the text:
"I dinnae know," the lassie whimpers.
"You dinnae know what you dinnae?"
Ms. Fagan also has an affinity for the F-word, which I don't mind used for emphasis.
The author apparently feels she needs 'tae' add that emphasis in every third paragraph,
frequently two or three times.
2 people found this helpful
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The Panopticon

The Panopticon is a novel written by author Jenni Fagan, It is an excellently written dystopian type novel that has become quite popular since its debut in 2012. The novel focuses on teenager Anais Hendricks and her struggles with foster care, the law and life in general. The book is actually named for the rehabilitation center the Panopticon, which is located within the depths of a forest. This center houses kids of all ages, and is for chronic young offenders. Anais is sent there because she is accused of beating a policewoman and putting her in a coma, though she claims she cannot remember anything that happened. The novel tells of her time at the Panopticon, the friendships she makes, and it touches on her past as well.

I actually really enjoyed this book. It was wonderfully written. It was compelling, suspenseful and emotional. The language, prose and rhetoric was exceptional, which added to my overall enjoyment. There was quite a bit of drug use (acid trips, pot, etc.) that Anais used as a coping mechanism and some language and unpleasant sexual encounters so I would recommend it for older teens as well as adults, but not for a younger audience. I love how the main protagonist (Anais) is so strong and even though she has undergone so much hurt and pain in her life, she is still fighting. There are times when she doubts reality, and she says some pretty strange things, but I think that just adds to the uniqueness of the book. All in all, I greatly enjoyed this book. It was different that a lot of books I have read in the past few years, and to me that was refreshing. It was emotionally gripping, and not an easy read, but I recommend it to all older readers who enjoy reading something new.
1 people found this helpful
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Read this book.

I started reading and thought this book just isn't for me. Then I found I was thinking about the characters when I was not reading and wanted to know more about them. This thought kept increasing the more I read and soon it was a compulsion to read, read, read. Anais lives a life I know nothing about and I wanted to keep learning about her and find out where she was going in life. I hope there is a sequel to this story so I can finally put her to rest in my mind.
1 people found this helpful
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Just Okay

Jenni Fagan's "The Panopticon" is a novel about orphan Anais Hendricks, a 15-year-old girl who has a troubled past. She has lived in bad foster homes, has committed multiple crimes and dabbled in drugs. Eventually, the troubled teen ends up in a group home (which is actually a prison). The government subjects all the teens to horrific abuse and experiments.

I thought I would like this book, more, in the end, I didn't. Although I really felt bad about Anais' harsh treatment and existence, I didn't like the character much. The Scottish words -- without translation -- also made it a little difficult to read. Anyway, just three stars.
1 people found this helpful