

Rosemary is shocked she chose to attend UC Davis because Davis was the last place the FBI had traced her brother to a decade ago.


The next day, the apartment manager tells Rosemary that a guy claiming to be her brother had come looking for her. Returning to her apartment, which she shares with a friend named Todd, Rosemary finds that Harlow has been crashing there. Her bag with the journals gets lost in transit. The subject of these journals is something that the family likes to keep silent about, so Rosemary feels nervous. Rosemary’s mother gives her some of her old journals, which Vince wanted to donate to a library. At dinner, the extended family shows their distaste for Vince. Vince, Rosemary’s father, helps get her out of jail and cajoles her into going home for Thanksgiving. This is deeply out of character for Rosemary. On a whim, Rosemary aligns herself with the aggressor, Harlow, and the two are sent to jail. Rosemary is in the cafeteria when a fight breaks out between a couple: Harlow and Reg. She does not have a particularly close relationship with her parents, and both of her siblings have been gone for at least a decade. The story begins in media res, with Rosemary meandering through college, unsure of what to do with herself. In We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves, narrator Rosemary Cooke uses a looping and weaving narrative that utilizes flashbacks to tell the story of her and her siblings’ lives. Putnam’s Sons edition of We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves.Ĭontent Warning: The Part 4 Chapter 1 Summary of this guide contains a reference to child suicide, which is referred to in We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves.
