The Exhibition of Persephone Q: A Novel

The Exhibition of Persephone Q: A Novel

by Jessi Jezewska Stevens
The Exhibition of Persephone Q: A Novel

The Exhibition of Persephone Q: A Novel

by Jessi Jezewska Stevens

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Overview

A New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice
A WALL STREET JOURNAL AND VOGUE MOST ANTICIPATED BOOK OF 2020

"A triumph of tone and intelligence. Percy Q's perspective is skewed and searching at once, and through her eyes, we see afresh not only New York's post-9/11 landscape but also the world of art, and love, and the process of becoming." —Rivka Galchen, author of Atmospheric Disturbances

Percy is pregnant. She hasn’t told a soul. Probably she should tell her husband—certainly she means to—but one night she wakes up to find she no longer recognizes him. Now, instead of sleeping, Percy is spending her nights taking walks through her neighborhood, all the while fretting over her marriage, her impending motherhood, and the sinister ways the city is changing.

Amid this alienation—from her husband, home, and rapidly changing body—a package arrives. In it: an exhibition catalog for a photography show. The photographs consist of a series of digitally manipulated images of a woman lying on a bed in a red room. It takes a moment for even Percy to notice that the woman is herself . . . but no one else sees the resemblance.

Percy must now come to grips with the fundamental question of identity in the digital age: To what extent do we own our own image, and to what extent is that image shaped by the eyes of others?

Capturing perfectly the haunted atmosphere of Manhattan immediately after 9/11—and the simmering insanity of America ever since—Jessi Jezewska Stevens's The Exhibition of Persephone Q is a darkly witty satire about how easy it is to lose ownership of our own selves.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781250785930
Publisher: Picador
Publication date: 03/02/2021
Pages: 224
Sales rank: 1,098,631
Product dimensions: 4.90(w) x 7.90(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Jessi Jezewska Stevens holds a BA in mathematics from Middlebury College and an MFA in fiction from Columbia University. Her stories and essays have appeared in The Paris Review, Tin House, Guernica, BOMB, and elsewhere. She lives in New York, where she teaches fiction. The Exhibition of Persephone Q is her debut novel.

Reading Group Guide

Percy is pregnant. She hasn’t told a soul. Probably she should tell her husband—certainly she means to—but one night she wakes up to find she no longer recognizes him. Now, instead of sleeping, Percy is spending her nights taking walks through her neighborhood, all the while fretting over her marriage, her impending motherhood, and the sinister ways the city is changing.

Amid this alienation—from her husband, home, and rapidly changing body—a package arrives. In it: an exhibition catalog for a photography show. The photographs consist of a series of digitally manipulated images of a woman lying on a bed in a red room. It takes a moment for for Percy to realize that the woman is herself . . . but no one else sees the resemblance.

Percy must now come to grips with the fundamental question of identity in the digital age: To what extent do we own our own image, and to what extent is that image shaped by the eyes of others?

Capturing perfectly the haunted atmosphere of Manhattan immediately after 9/11—and the simmering insanity of America ever since—Jessi Jezewska Stevens’ The Exhibition of Persephone Q is a darkly witty and masterful satire about how easy it is to lose ownership of our own selves.


1. Consider the epigraph that begins the novel. How do you think it frames the events therein?

2. In what ways does the myth of Persephone, particularly her abduction by Hades, run parallel to the events of the novel? How does the story of Percy echo that of her namesake?

3. The novel takes place in New York City in the months immediately following 9/11. What effect does the setting have on the novel’s tone? In what ways does it reinforce certain themes of the story, or of contemporary American life?

4. The novel is jump-started in part by Percy’s mother’s bowl falling from a shelf in the kitchen, awakening Percy from sleep. How do other motifs of mothers and motherhood appear in the storyline? How does Percy respond to them?

5. Percy frequently searches her own name online, referring to the other women who share it as her “doppelgangers.” She also participates in internet discussion boards, sometimes even writing to the self-help author she works for, hiding her identity behind an anonymous username. Compare these two modes of Percy’s internet ‘self.’ What do you think she’s seeking in these online interactions?

6. Percy claims, “I was the sort of person who accepted rather than shaped her circumstances. My life was a long hallway punctuated by a series of open doors” (10). How does discovering the exhibition alter Percy’s passive attitude towards her life, if at all? Do you think Percy’s neutrality makes her a strong observer of her world? What kind of narrator is she?

7. Percy ponders the muses of male artists, the “Olgas, Doras, Jackies,” noting that when she compares “the photographs of these women to the paintings in which they appeared, they almost never resembled themselves. . . the lover’s perspective transformed her” (86). How does Percy contend with being the object of a work of art? Does she manage to transform herself from object to subject? In what ways does she frustrate traditional gender roles, and in what ways might she be complicit?

8. When Percy goes to speak to the gallery receptionist about her appearance in the exhibition, “an image of Claire, in her violet windbreaker, dashed through my mind, and I watched her go” (80). Later, Claire turns out to be the only person who believes Percy about the exhibition. However, Percy decides “it was not wise to yoke my fate to Claire’s” (131). Why do you think Percy turns away from the affirmation she spends most of the novel seeking? Why doesn’t Percy want to be connected to Claire, another woman “whom no one will believe” (126)?

9. “‘Two disappearances and one of them art? Now, that’s an event,’ Claire said” (125). Compare Harold’s disappearance with Percy’s search to claim her identity in the exhibition. What are the similarities and differences in each respective form of erasure?

10. Why do you think Percy hides both the exhibition and her pregnancy from Misha for so long?

11. Discuss the novel’s structure. How does it change in the second part of the book, and what effect does it have on the novel as a whole? How does the introduction of Percy’s past, in part 2, influence your understanding of her in part 1?

12. Why do you think Percy refers to her baby as her “nebula”?

13. “It strikes me there are fewer private moments now. There is a great race on, really. The goal is to gather your own impressions before someone else can tell you what you saw, what you are seeing” (188). What do the many now-antiquated aspects of early internet culture featured in the novel bring to light about the internet and online privacy today?

14. Toward the end of the novel, Percy guides Buck, an attendee of the self-help author’s poetry readings, to the hospital where Yvette works to finally have a sore on his face medically examined. Why do you think the author chose to bring back this character for the novel’s weighty penultimate scene? What do you feel this scene reveals about Percy? Has she changed?

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