Losing Beck Losing Beck

Losing Beck

A Triptych

    • $13.99
    • $13.99

Publisher Description

A young poet’s relationship with a predatory professor is explored through a diary, a play, and a novella dealing with themes of grief, trauma, and desire.

Jennie Silver has been seduced, abused, and abandoned by Benedict Eck, a Midwestern literature professor known for being influenced by Hungarian émigré novelist Avigdor Element, and a notorious womanizer known for preying on vulnerable graduate students. In the process, Jennie keeps a diary and writes a play and a novella in her attempt to control her desperate, high-pitched emotions focused on a man she is uncontrollably drawn to and at the same time finds repugnant—a man who is one of the keepers and part of the legacy of Element’s bad behavior.

Spanning a hundred years of history from when Nijinsky danced “The Afternoon of the Faun” in Paris in 1912, through World Wars I and II, to very close to the present, Losing Beck is not only a portrait of one woman’s relationship with one man, but an exploration of obsession, grief, desire, and the effects of historical trauma.

“This triptych of narratives contains a plenitude of characters driven by overpowering emotions and dark motives . . . I was especially fascinated by the meticulous scrutiny of family relations, especially mother-daughter attachments, often dramatized against a backdrop of twentieth-century Jewish history.” —Laurence Goldstein, author of The American Poet at the Movies: A Critical History

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2018
December 4
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
345
Pages
PUBLISHER
Red Hen Press
SELLER
OpenRoad Integrated Media, LLC
SIZE
2
MB

More Books Like This

Spring/Summer 2017 St. Martin's First Sampler Spring/Summer 2017 St. Martin's First Sampler
2016
The Writers Post Journal The Writers Post Journal
2011
Best Canadian Stories 2021 Best Canadian Stories 2021
2021
Momaya Annual Review 2009 Momaya Annual Review 2009
2011
Underground Rivers Underground Rivers
2012
Delmarva Review, Volume 9 Delmarva Review, Volume 9
2016