I Know This Much Is True

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Title I Know This Much Is True
Early edition cover with Prize Notice
Early edition cover with Prize notice
Author Wally Lamb
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher HarperCollins
Released June 1998
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 901 pp (first edition, hardback)
ISBN ISBN 0-06-039162-6 (first edition, hardback)

I Know This Much Is True is a novel by Wally Lamb, published in 1998. It was featured in Oprah's Book Club in 1998.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Dominick Birdsey's identical twin, Thomas, is a paranoid schizophrenic. With proper medication, he can work at a coffee stand, but occasionally he has severe episodes. Thinking he is making a sacrificial protest that will stop the war in the Middle East, Thomas cuts off his own hand in a public library. Dominick sees him through the ensuing decision not to attempt to reattach the hand, and makes efforts on his behalf to free him from what he knows to be an inadequate and depressing hospital for the dangerous mentally ill.

In the process, Dominick reviews his own difficult life as Thomas's normal brother, his marriage to his ex-wife, which ended after their only child died of SIDS, and his ongoing hostility toward his stepfather. First in Thomas's interests, and then for his own sake, he sees a therapist, an Indian woman employed by the hospital. She helps Dominick come to understand Thomas's illness better and the family's accommodations or reactions to it in terms of the whole family system.

In the course of treatment, Dominick discovers sexual abuses taking place in the hospital and helps to expose the perpetrators. He succeeds in getting Thomas released, but Thomas soon dies, apparently suicide. After Thomas's death Dominick finds out about their birth father--a secret their mother had shared with Thomas, but not with him.

As all of this is going on, he also is reading his grandfather's life story which informs the reader a lot about the legacy of twins in their family. Using a lot of imagery of monkeys and rabbits, Dominick learns a lot about himself and his mother through learning about his grandfather.

He also learns that his live-in girlfriend has been letting a man she's been seeing on the side in the room with him during intercourse and that she is HIV-positive. She asks him to keep her baby if she dies. At first he resists, but later, having found his way back into a relationship with his wife, takes the baby. The book ends with several healing events that leave Dominick able to cope with the considerable loss, failure, and sadness in his personal and family history.

[edit] Characters in "I Know This Much Is True"

  • Dominick Birdsey: protagonist
  • Thomas Birdsey: Dominick's identical twin who is paranoid schizophrenic
  • Dr. Patel: Thomas's psychiatrist at Hatch, Dominick's therapist
  • Lisa Sheffer: Thomas's social worker, Dominick's friend
  • Dessa Constantine: Dominick's ex-wife
  • Concettina Birdsey: Thomas and Dominick's mother
  • Ray Birdsey: Thomas and Dominick's stepfather
  • Ralph and Penny Drinkwater: the only other twins in Three Rivers, Connecticut.
  • Dominick Tempesta: Thomas and Dominick's Grandfather.
  • Leo and Angie (Athena Constantine) Blood: Dominick's best friend, and his sister-in-law

[edit] Major themes

The novel includes several themes taken from the Old Testament, among them the stories of Kain and Abel and Job.

Drowning.

Renewal in life.

Mirror -vs- Image

Wholeness -vs- fragmentation

Monkeys -vs- rabbits

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Film, TV or theatrical adaptations

According to IMDB, a movie based on the book is in the works and is to be released in 2008.

[edit] Awards and nominations

It was featured in Oprah's Book Club in 1998.