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Review: Birds and burdens in Lydia Millet's 'Dinosaurs'

鈥淒inosaurs,鈥 by Lydia Millet (W.W. Norton) Besides moving on from a bad breakup, Gil, the protagonist of Lydia Millet鈥檚 鈥淒inosaurs,鈥 walks from New York to Phoenix because he 鈥渨anted to pay for something.
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This cover image released by W. W. Norton shows "Dinosaurs," by Lydia Millet. (W.W. Norton via AP)

鈥淒inosaurs,鈥 by Lydia Millet (W.W. Norton)

Besides moving on from a bad breakup, Gil, the protagonist of Lydia Millet鈥檚 鈥淒inosaurs,鈥 walks from New York to Phoenix because he 鈥渨anted to pay for something.鈥 He explains this to his new next-door-neighbor, Ardis, and her best friend, Sarah, over drinks later into this resettlement, saying, 鈥淲hen you have a lot of money, you never pay for anything. You never feel the cost, so you live like everything is free. There鈥檚 never a trade-off. Never a choice or a sacrifice, unless you give up your time. I wanted the change to cost me. You know? I wanted to earn it.鈥

This search for redemption is rooted in the inheritance he received from his oil baron grandparents, and his attempt to earn it manifests in a philosophy of charity. It鈥檚 the least he can do for the legacy that earned his family billions on others鈥 backs and for all the suffering that exists around him. Narrating between his past in New York and his present in Arizona, readers follow Gil鈥檚 previous charity at a refugee center, where fellow volunteers became some of his only friends and the language barrier satisfied his avoidance of interaction, to his current position as a bodyguard for traumatized women at a women鈥檚 shelter.

He also gives his time to the next door family, which becomes an extension of his. Ardis, a psychotherapist, is married to Ted, a developer of sorts, and they have two children 鈥 angsty adolescent Clem, and sweetly boisterous Tom. He becomes a babysitter-friend to Tom, exerting a parental protectiveness throughout a stifled world 鈥 picking him up from a martial arts class early upon seeing an instructor鈥檚 swastika tattoo, helping him navigate the neighborhood鈥檚 anti-skateboarding rules, and standing up to his bully, and his bully鈥檚 bully. In his friendship with Tom鈥檚 parents, he is slowly entangled in their own marital challenges besides their lives, as he partners with Sarah despite his earlier attempts to maintain a friendship.

Gil reflects on his volunteer friends from before, one who swore like a sailor and was in the military, the other a devout Catholic. He thinks about Lane, who ghosted him after a decade-long relationship. He contemplates his painful childhood, treating the man who contributed to some of that damage with a steady charity.

Importantly, birds take readers through these relationships, the animal鈥檚 prehistoric antecedent the novel鈥檚 namesake. One of the few things Gil noticed on his walk to Phoenix, birds structure the novel literally, a different species titling each chapter and appearing throughout the plot鈥檚 development. The hummingbirds set up Gil and Ardis鈥 friendship when she brings him a feeder and continues to replace the nectar, the raven that reflects a new friend鈥檚 identity and love-life aspirations, the hawk that sharpens his quest for whoever is illegally hunting quails at night. The way these birds journey together and build upon one another鈥檚 human counterparts is where the novel鈥檚 authenticity and beauty lie.

Gil鈥檚 insightful rumination bring the writing its life and the characters their development. 鈥淎 kid was like an ornamental vase placed awkwardly at the edge of a doorway. You stubbed your toe on the darn thing every time you passed,鈥 explains Gil鈥檚 childless life. Yet he is later touched by Tom, 鈥渁 small boy鈥檚 condolences.鈥 The solitude of the hawks and vultures he notices on his route, 鈥渙nly broken by courtship and breeding,鈥 like his own solitude that he admits to feeling along with fear as 鈥渨aves that often stopped his from remembering the one thing. The one thing and the greatest thing.鈥

While Millet shines light on the timely theme of taking responsibility for the world we鈥檝e inherited is vital, these larger questions the novel hints at 鈥 the infinite, love鈥檚 intangibility, the stains of evil 鈥 leave readers hanging as she wrangles them into simplistic, flat turns of events. The anticlimactic slice-of-life frame of Gil鈥檚 character never quite substantiates the sweeping, all-encompassing conjecture at which he gradually arrives. Sparse writing creates mystery but also hinders the possible intricacies of the outcome. For all the novel鈥檚 transcendence through the past's burdens and the goodness of small acts, its convictions don鈥檛 go far enough.

Amancai Biraben, The Associated Press

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