Free Therapy by Rebecca Ivory review – delicious reveals and rug pulls in stories of aimless women

Free Therapy by Rebecca Ivory review – delicious reveals and rug pulls in stories of aimless women

The debut Irish writer circles around twentysomethings with crap jobs, crap men and even worse housing work in this nicely observed collection

The latest Sally Rooney-endorsed Irish writer makes a book-length debut with a short story collection that captures the experience of being a young woman today with a clear eye and a listless sigh. Crap jobs and a desire not to go to them, crap men and the desire still to go to them, and worse-than-crap housing are common themes in these airless stories of aimless women.

The title isn’t just cute: it’s no surprise when Rebecca Ivory thanks her therapists in her acknowledgment. She is excellent at revealing how our understanding of ourselves, and others, is a layered and silently shifting thing; she peels back what is said to expose the tender and embarrassing desires and delusions beneath. Her characters are frequently self-aware yet stuck – trapped in agonised inaction. They’re defeated by the most basic tasks; one fails to replace a lightbulb, another a broken bike light, as if preferring to simply stay in the dark.

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