The Anatomy of Desire by L R Dorn

The Anatomy of Desire

by L R Dorn

A modern tale of American striving, social media stardom, a fatal love triangle, and a young woman on trial for murder—a mesmerizing reimagining of Theodore Dreiser's classic novel of crime and punishment, An American Tragedy.

Claire Griffith seems to have it all, a thriving career, a gorgeous, successful boyfriend, a glamorous circle of friends. She always knew she was destined for more than the life her deeply conservative parents preached to her. Arriving in Los Angeles as a flat broke teenager, she has risen to become a popular fitness coach and social media influencer. Having rebranded herself as Cleo Ray, she stands on the threshold of achieving her most cherished dreams.

One summer day, Cleo and a young woman named Beck Alden set off in a canoe on a quiet, picture-perfect mountain lake. An hour later, Beck is found dead in the water, her face cut and bruised, and Cleo is missing. Authorities suspect foul play and news about Cleo’s involvement goes viral. Who was Beck and what was the nature of her and Cleo’s relationship? Was Beck an infatuated follower who took things too far? If Cleo is innocent, why did she run? Was it an accident? Or was it murder?

As evidence of Cleo’s secret life surfaces, the world begins to see just how hard she strived to get to the top— and how fast and far the fall is from celebrity to infamy.

L. R. Dorn’s reimagining of Theodore Dreiser’s novel, told in the form of a true crime docuseries a la Serial and The Jinx—with characters speaking through the “transcripts” of recorded interviews—The Anatomy of Desire exposes the ambition, sexual passion, and dark side of success that readers will find as achingly poignant as they did a century ago.

 


Reviewed by mrs_mander_reads on

5 of 5 stars

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This was so good! I loved the docuseries-style narrative, and the full-cast recording of the audio is a must listen if you enjoy audiobooks. It's not a very suspenseful story, but the narrative of the court proceedings is super compelling. Recommend for readers who enjoy the murder mystery genre.

*Potential Spoiler*
The only place I can find fault with the book is that we don't ACTUALLY know what happened on the canoe. I can see where some readers may like the ambiguity, but I enjoy having things all tied up. It would have been super interesting to me if Beck's version of events had been included as an epilogue.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 6 July, 2021: Finished reading
  • 6 July, 2021: Reviewed