Published in 2025
260 pages
8 hours and 43 minutes
Jessica Gross is the author of Hysteria (2020), which Publishers Weekly declared “every bit a page-turner as it is a descent into sexual madness.” Hysteria has been optioned for TV development, and Open Wide for film development. Gross’s nonfiction has appeared in the New York Times Magazine, Lilith, and the Los Angeles Review of Books, among other publications. She has taught writing at The New School and Texas Tech University and currently lives in West Texas.
What is this book about?
A wonderfully weird love story about the sometimes mad, troubling and vulnerable things people do to get close to others – Open Wide will quite literally get under your skin
Olive is desperate to get close to Theo – really, really close.
Despite being a radio host, she’s always struggled to connect with people. And now she’s in her thirties, single, and so flustered by relationships that she secretly records her conversations, hoping to decipher social clues and find a way to be less alone.
Then Theo turns up for a shift at the food pantry where she volunteers. He’s a surgeon fascinated by human organs, a former football player, and possibly as weird as Olive. For the first time, someone seems to crave and understand her.
Every recording Olive makes of Theo is a balm – which just makes her more afraid of losing him. The only solution seems to be to bind him to her forever. Luckily, the gap between Theo’s front teeth is just wide enough for something – or someone – to slip inside.
Arresting and immersive, Open Wide explores the boundaries of love and the body, as universal human impulses bleed into the surreal.