Forty-Seventeen
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
What could he tell her now, now that he was forty and she was no longer 17?
He is a failed writer turned diplomat, an anarchist learning the value of discipline. He moves in a world which takes him from the Australian wilderness to the conference rooms of Vienna and Geneva; from the whore-house to warzone he feels the pull of the genetic spiral of his ancestry. At the sharp axis of his mid-life he scans the memorabilia of his feelings in the hope of giving answers.
In his first full-length novel Moorhouse presents a roving, dissatisfied man entering middle age in a house-of-mirrors portrait: fragmentary and multifaceted. Sean, a hard-drinking, hard-living Australian, has just turned 40; the other half of the title refers to a precocious schoolgirl who is one of his many liaisons. The most important of the other women who drift into and out of his life include his ex-wife Robyn, now unflinching in the face of cancer; Belle, Sean's fellow sexual adventurer; and Edith Campbell Berry, an aging iconoclast whom Sean encounters in Vienna and Israel.
Forty-Seventeen is told with characteristic Moorhouse style - candid, wryly insightful and morbidly comic - and, in this resonant and acclaimed book achieves a new virtuosity.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The author of Days of Wine and Rage here presents a roving, dissatisfied man entering middle age in a house-of-mirrors portrait: fragmentary and multifaceted. Sean, a hard-drinking, hard-living Australian, has just turned 40; the other half of the title refers to a precocious schoolgirl who is one of his many liaisons. The most important of the other women who drift into and out of his life include his ex-wife Robyn, now unflinching in the face of cancer; Belle, Sean's fellow sexual adventurer; and Edith, an aging iconoclast whom Sean encounters in Vienna and Israel. Moorhouse's narrative is as peripatetic as his hero; the novel--really a series of sketches--trots casually through space and time. One chapter pauses to examine Robyn's girlhood love letters; another offers a fascinating disquisition on what sudden sobriety feels like to a man who has lived on 20 drinks a day. The results are, probably inevitably, uneven; despite the author's always intelligent prose, Sean remains one step beyond his reach.