Little Monsters
PERFECT FOR FANS OF FLEISHMAN IS IN TROUBLE AND THE PAPER PALACE
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- 10,99 €
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- 10,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
'Beautiful, lyrical and unvarnished' MIRANDA COWLEY HELLER, author of THE PAPER PALACE
'Affecting and powerful' OBSERVER
'A page-turner' FINANCIAL TIMES
A riveting novel about Cape Cod, complicated families and long-buried secrets
Summer, Cape Cod. Every member of the Gardner family is hiding a secret. Ken, a businessman with political ambitions, is caught in an internet chatroom and forced into couples therapy. Abby is ashamed to still depend on her brother’s goodwill to sustain her life as an artist. Adam, their father and brilliant oceanographer, decides to come off his bipolar disorder medication to make one last scientific breakthrough. And then there’s Steph: a new person living on the periphery, who harbours a secret that will change everything . . .
'Smart, funny and beautifully written. Brodeur is a brilliant dissector of family relationships, a lyricist of the natural world, and an astute observer of our inner turmoils' MONICA ALI
'Gorgeous, gripping, I couldn't put it down' RUTH OZEKI
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Memoirist Brodeur (Wild Game) sets this shimmering novel in the "white-hot mess" of summer 2016. Adam Gardner, a stodgy and sleepless oceanic research scientist on Cape Cod, is not looking forward to his upcoming 70th birthday. In a decisive moment, he stops taking his lithium—prescribed for his bipolar disorder—in hopes that without the medication he will unlock the secret to how whales communicate with each other. Brodeur alternates Adam's story with those of the son and daughter he'd raised on his own after his wife died prematurely. Ken is a shrewd businessman and political hopeful hobbled by his pomposity, while Abby is a struggling artist. Both are highly esteemed by their father. By the time of Adam's birthday party, he's become newly inspired and "hyperaware" of his life and surroundings. What was supposed to be a normal family event crumbles beneath the weight of hidden animosities, secrets, lies, and buried childhood trauma, all of which play out amid the festivities. Sound character development and a keen sense of place add to Brodeur's astute portrayal of the turbulence between the siblings and their spouses, and the prose renders Adam's magical thinking with precision ("Adam felt certain that every book he'd ever read, every piece of art that had ever moved him, every conversation, creature, curiosity, and concept he'd encountered in his lifetime would align like cherries in the slot machine of his mind"). With this intricate story, Brodeur distinguishes herself as a novelist of the first rank.