Summary of Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt:A Read with Jenna Pick - GP SUMMARY - E-Book

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Summary of Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt:A Read with Jenna Pick

 

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Remarkably Bright Creatures is a charming, witty and compulsively readable exploration of friendship, reckoning, and hope that traces a widow's unlikely connection with a giant Pacific octopus. Marcellus, a giant Pacific octopus living at the aquarium, deduces what happened the night Tova's son disappeared. Shelby Van Pelt's debut novel is a gentle reminder that taking a hard look at the past can help uncover a future.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2023

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Summary of Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt:A Read with Jenna Pick

Shelby Van Pelt's debut novel explores friendship, reckoning, and hope through Marcellus, a giant Pacific octopus.BookRix GmbH & Co. KG81371 Munich

Title page

Summary of

Remarkably Bright Creatures

A

Summary of Shelby Van Pelt’s book

A Read with Jenna Pick

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Summary of Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt: A Read with Jenna Pick

By GP SUMMARY© 2023, GP SUMMARY.

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NOTE TO READERS

This is an unofficial summary & analysis of Shelby Van Pelt’s “Remarkably Bright Creatures: A Read with Jenna Pick” designed to enrich your reading experience.

 

DISCLAIMER

The contents of the summary are not intended to replace the original book. It is meant as a supplement to enhance the reader's understanding. The contents within can neither be stored electronically, transferred, nor kept in a database. Neither part nor full can the document be copied, scanned, faxed, or retained without the approval from the publisher or creator.

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This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This eBook may not be resold or given away to other people. If you are reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please purchase your own copy. You agree to accept all risks of using the information presented inside this book.

Copyright 2023. All rights reserved.

Day 1,299 of My Captivity

Marcellus is a giant Pacific octopus who was captured and imprisoned. He has a plaque on the wall beside his enclosure that states his size, preferred diet, and where he might live if not a prisoner. It also mentions his intellectual prowess and penchant for cleverness, and warns humans of his camouflage. Marcellus' name is Marcellus McSquiddles, which leads many humans to assume he is a squid. His life span is four years, 1,460 days, and he was brought here as a juvenile. At the very least, one hundred and sixty days remain until his sentence is complete.

The Silver-Dollar Scar

Tova Sullivan is the oldest employee at SOWELL BAY AQUARIUM, and her job is to clean the floors, wipe down the glass, and empties the trash bins. She has never understood the purpose of chewing gum, and her weaponry is a file. She marches to the supply closet at a purposeful clip, and raindrops land on the skylight. It's been a dreadful June, as everyone keeps saying. Tova is visiting an aquarium in Sowell Bay, Washington.

She encounters a chewing gum and a bronze statue of a Pacific sea lion. She passes a Japanese crab, a sharp-nosed sculpin, and a wolf eel. The wolf eel glides out of its rocky cavern, with jagged teeth jutting upward from its lower jaw. Tova is reminded of the horror films her late husband, Will, took to watching in the middle of the night. Tova is a new employee at the aquarium, and her favorite exhibit is the wolf eel.

She finds a giant Pacific octopus behind the rock, and imagines daytime, people rapping their knuckles on the glass. Tova uses vinegar with a hint of lemon oil, and collects trash in the lobby, restrooms, and break room. She also runs her rag around the base of the ancient coffee maker and inside the splatter-stained microwave, which smells of spaghetti. Tova is scolding the empty room due to empty takeout cartons on the floor. She picks up the cartons and tosses them in the trash can.

Next to the trash is a small lunch table, where she sees a brownish-orange clump shoved in the corner. The octopus's eye materializes from somewhere in the fleshy mass and its marble pupil widens, then its eyelid narrows. The creature is tangled in the mess of power cords, making it impossible to properly sweep. Tova tries to steady her shaking hands, but her back pops and the octopus lashes again, shoving one of the chairs with alarming force. Tova passes by a plaque under a giant Pacific octopus tank and finds it stating that octopuses are dangerous to humans.

She tries to unplug the cord, but the octopus flinches backward. She tries to yank the cord away, but the octopus tightens his grip. She watches as the octopus stalks out the break room door, suckering along on the thickest part of each of his eight legs. She hurries after him, but by the time she reaches the hallway, the octopus is nowhere to be seen. Tova is losing her faculties and is hallucinating about an octopus.

Tova's friends, the Knit-Wits, convinced her to buy a new car when she started her job, but she refused due to safety concerns. After depositing her jug of vinegar and bottle of lemon oil in the trunk, she casts a glance down the pier. Tova's friends, the Knit-Wits, convinced her to buy a new car due to safety concerns. The old ferry dock sits across from the aquarium, with barnacles covering its pilings. Tova crosses the weathered wooden planks and enters the old ticket booth.

She finds a silver-dollar mark on her wrist, which is about the size of a silver dollar. The fog has lifted and a freighter is anchored to the south, with moonlight shimmying across the water. Tova imagines Erik, her only child, holding the candles for her.

Day 1,300 of My Captivity

The diet of a giant Pacific octopus consists of crabs, clams, shrimp, cockles, abalone, fish, and fish eggs. Mackerel, halibut, and herring are the main delicacies, but the octopus must take matters into their own arms to procure them. Fish eggs are an ideal snack, and the cleaning woman saved the octopus from a potential downfall.

Falsehood Cookies

Mary Ann Minetti, Janice Kim, Barb Vanderhoof, and Barb Vanderhoof are the Knit-Wits, a group of women who meet at their weekly luncheons. Mary Ann is wearing a crocheted yellow cozy, while Janice is wearing a large T-shirt with the logo of a Korean shopping center. Barb has combed her gray hair into gel-set spikes, which she joked was only fitting for a Barb Vanderhoof. Janice's husband, Dr. Peter Kim, is retired but well-connected in the medical community and can recommend someone for Tova. Tova has a minor incident at work, where she has a tentacle wrapped around her wrist.

Three pairs of eyes look at her, and she takes a chocolate chip cookie from Mary Ann's platter. Barb tells Tova that she worked at St. Ann's for a while after Rick died, and Mary Ann suggests she may need help with her finances. Tova refuses, as her bank account would cover her modest needs several times over. After rising from the table, Tova sets her teacup down and leans on the counter. The Knit-Wits began as a knitting club 25 years ago, with a handful of Sowell Bay women meeting to swap yarn.

Tova wishes she could tuck the magenta petals back into their buds, but the chill in the air is unseasonable for mid-June. Mary Ann has arranged a collection of religious paraphernalia on the windowsill, and Janice is worried about Tova. Barb tells Tova that Andie was supposed to bring the girls up for their summer break, but they had a hitch in their plans. She and Mark took the kids to Las Vegas for Christmas. Barb pronounces both words with equal weight and contempt, the way someone might say spoiled milk.

The most important details in this text are that Erik's disappearance was initially considered a runaway case, but the sheriff speculated that Erik had stepped away for a short time, planning to come back. Tova had made an almond cake for Erik's eighteenth birthday, which lingered in her kitchen for days after. Erik's disappearance was initially considered a runaway case, but the sheriff speculated that Erik had stepped away for a short time, planning to come back. Will always had a theory there was a girl involved, but no trace of any girl was ever found. The Knit-Wits have been friends for years and Tova has never believed that Erik took his own life.

They discuss Mary Ann's neighbor suing his orthopedist and Barb's Yorkie, Rolo, who is home with a sour stomach. Tova wonders if it's better to have tragedies clustered together, to make good use of the existing rawness. At three in the afternoon, the Knit-Wits are gathering their jackets and pocketbooks from the backs of their chairs. Mary Ann, a Scandinavian woman, is in need of help with her job. Tova, a young woman with Scandinavian genes, offers to help Mary Ann, but Mary Ann is not convinced.

Tova drives to Mary Ann's house in the bottom of a wide valley, where she remembers riding through daffodil fields when she was a little girl. On the other side of the valley, a spot of sun glows on the water, bathing Puget Sound in clear light. Tova turns right onto Sound View Drive, which runs along the ridgeline above the water, towards home. The chilly, wet weather has dampened her enthusiasm for yard work. Tova's answering machine is constantly full of nonsense, but she always clears it out first thing in the morning.

The first message is soliciting donations, the second is a scam, the third is an error, and the fourth is a message from her brother Lars. Tova punches the button to hush the machine and hears a message from Maureen Cochran.

Day 1,301 of My Captivity

The protagonist must resubmerge within eighteen minutes or experience The Consequences, and must choose between staying in the pump room or breaching the door. Upon returning, they discovered that the stool had failed to hold the door, leading to the Consequences. They were able to close the gap in their tank by replacing a tentacle and pushing an arm through the crack.

The Welina Mobile Park Is for Lovers

Cameron Cassmore is driving to Aunt Jeanne's trailer park in the Merce Valley on Saturday morning. He borrows Brad's truck and takes a swig of an energy drink. His aunt Jeanne's landlord is threatening to evict her over her vines, and Cameron learns that a clematis is a flowering and vining perennial native to China and Japan, brought to Western Europe in the Victorian era, and prized for its ability to climb trellises. He also learns that Aunt Jeanne has a huge bush full of white flowers, a twinkle-light veil-like thing, a water fountain, and frogs. The Welina Mobile Park has a prize for best yard, but Aunt Jeanne's immaculate yard contrasts with the disaster inside the trailer.

The landlord, Jimmy Delmonico, is glaring at Aunt Jeanne and accusing her of trying to make her rip down her clematis because Sissy Baker said she saw something. Aunt Jeanne snatches her cane and points it at Delmonico, accusing him of trying to make her rip down her clematis because Sissy Baker said she saw something. Cameron and Delmonico visit the Welina Mobile Park, where Mrs. Baker said she saw a snake in a plant. Cameron scoffs at this, but Aunt Jeanne reproaches his language. Delmonico explains that snakes don't have eyelids and there are safety codes if something creates a hazardous situation.