Clam Down: A Metamorphosis
By (Author) Anelise Chen
Random House USA Inc
One World Books
1st July 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
B
Hardback
368
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
A wondrously unusual memoir about a woman who, in the midst of mourning her divorce, retreats into her shell and renegotiates her relationship to solitude, shame, and connection-from an acclaimed 5 Under 35 National Book Foundation honoree. A wondrously unusual memoir about a woman who, in the midst of mourning her divorce, retreats into her shell and renegotiates her relationship to solitude, shame, and connection-from an acclaimed 5 Under 35 National Book Foundation honoree. "We've all heard the one about waking up as a cockroach-but what if a crisis turned you into a clam" After the dissolution of her marriage, a writer is transformed into a "clam" via typo after her mother keeps texting her to "clam down." The funny if unhelpful command forces her to ask what it means to "clam down" during crises-to retreat, hide, close up, and stay silent. Idiomatically, we are said to "clam up" when we can't speak, and to "come out of our shell" when we reemerge, transformed. In order to understand her path, the clam digs into examples of others who have also "succumbed to shellfish" to embrace lives of reclusiveness and extremity. But this is a story that radiates outward from the kernel of selfhood to family, society, and ecosystem. Finally, the writer must confront her own "clam genealogy" to interview her dad who disappeared for a decade to write a mysterious accounting software called Shell Computing. In learning about his past to better understand his decisions, she learns not only how to forgive him, but also how to move on from her own wounds of abandonment and insecurity. Using a genre-defying structure and written in novelistic prose that draws from art, literature, and natural history, she unfolds a complex story of interspecies connectedness, in which humans learn lessons of adaptation and survival from their mollusk kin. While it makes sense in certain situations to retreat behind fortified walls, the choice to do so also exacts a price. What is the price of building up walls How can one take them back down when they are no longer necessary
With a candescent, transportingmetamorphosis from reluctant bivalve to woman, Anelise Chen takes us from a taxidermy shop in Paris to the lives of Darwin, OKeeffe, and Agnes Martin, the canyons of the Southwest and the bowels of her immigrant fathers quixotic and doomed accounting program, restlessly probing her origin story to divine her future.For me, there is no other writer who delves with as much comic pathos and brio into the besieged depths of the abject to surface on the shores of the ecstatic self.From the moment this mollusk opens her mouth, we are treated to the most piquant, glorious brine. As her father would say, it is top cream, top brass.Lisa Hsiao Chen, author of Activities of Daily Living
Clam Down isa marvel and a delight!Thisstunningbook believes in typos as doorways, divorce as oxygen, mollusks as mercy, and seashells as generative constraints.From the moment I started reading it, I could hardly put it downcarrying it around like a talisman, crawling inside it like a wunderkammer, putting my ear to it like a shell, so I could hear its vast, surprising ocean.Full of heart and humor, expansive curiosity and gritty intimacy, this is a book that will stay with me foreverfor its wild pulse, its compassion, its humility and its abandon; for its gut-renovation of the first-person and its veins full of wonder. I treasure it.Leslie Jamison, author of Splinters
Clam Down is amarvelously funny and affecting memoir that reads like no other memoir out there. Chen's uncategorizable book isbrilliant and unpredictable,and reveals something essential and hidden about the nature of clams, humans, inheritance, rational thinking, obsessions and love.This book is the companion we all need.Rivka Galchen, author of Everyone Knows Your Mother Is a Witch
Anelise Chen writesdeeply idiosyncratic and beautifulbooks. Clam Down is ingenious, hilarious, and deeply moving.Chens work beguiles us, defies easy categories, and manages to be both wide-ranging andprofoundly intimate.The perfect work for this fraught time.Dana Spiotta, author of Wayward
Underneath the clams infamous stoicism, a confused heart considers how its body has kept score. Clam Down isa modern love story embedded within a metafictional review of animal-metamorphosis tales placed within a cautionary environmental fable enclosed by an immigrant familys saga. As Anelise Chen disarmingly walks the reader through this blooming, elaborate, emotional game of shells, her strategically conversational persona unguards us, allowing her intricate metaphors to align intostunning revelation.Eugene Lim, author of Search History
Anelise Chen is the author of the experimental novel So Many Olympic Exertions, a finalist for the VCU Cabell First Novelist Award. She is a 5 Under 35 Honoree from the National Book Foundation. Her hybrid memoir, Clam Down, is based on her mollusk column for the Paris Review. She has received residencies and fellowships from the Asian American Writers' Workshop, Blue Mountain Center, Banff Centre, the Wurlitzer Foundation, and the Akademie Schloss Solitude in Stuttgart, Germany. Her essays and reviews have appeared in The New York Times, NPR, BOMB Magazine, The New Republic, VICE, Village Voice and many other publications. Chen received her MFA from New York University and her bachelor's degree from the University of California Berkeley. She is currently an assistant professor of creative writing and director of undergraduate studies in creative writing at Columbia University School of the Arts.