Double Blind
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- 209,00 Kč
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- 209,00 Kč
Publisher Description
'I was gripped by it' IAN McEWAN
Three lives collide, not one of them will emerge unchanged - the exhilarating new novel from the author of the Patrick Melrose series.
When Olivia meets a new lover, Francis, just as she is welcoming her dearest friend Lucy back from New York, her life expands dramatically. Her connection to Francis, a committed naturalist living off-grid, is immediate and startling. Eager to involve Lucy in her joy, Olivia introduces the two - but Lucy has news of her own that binds the trio unusually close.
Over the months that follow, Lucy's boss Hunter, Olivia's psychoanalyst parents, and a young man named Sebastian are pulled into the friends' orbit, and not one of them will emerge unchanged.
'Moving and so funny' Observer, Books of the Year
'Heroic and astonishing' Sunday Times
'Clever and compassionate... A novel with heart' Spectator
'Entertaining... Immensely pleasurable' Daily Mail
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
St. Aubyn (the Patrick Melrose novels) expounds on epigenetics, rewilding, art, neuroscience, and philosophy in this sublime character-driven novel. With his usual elegant prose, St. Aubyn follows three friends—Francis, Olivia, and Lucy—through a transformative year. Naturalist Francis meets biologist Olivia at a "megafauna" conference in Oxford and feels an instant "subterranean attraction." He later anxiously awaits her visit to the Sussex estate he has vowed to reclaim with its deer, pigs, cattle, and ponies, envisioning an "English savannah." Meanwhile, Olivia anticipates Lucy's arrival from New York to London, where she's taken a job with a venture capital firm headed by the scheming Hunter Sterling. Lucy's also blindsided by unexplainable muscle spasms that lead to the "high tech phrenology" of a graphically detailed brain biopsy. While she is recovering with Francis and Olivia in Sussex, Hunter helicopters in with caviar, blinis, and vodka. Add the sudden, unexpected appearance of 34-year-old schizophrenic Sebastian Tanner, whose true identity threatens to square the friends' already fraught triangle and lends an element of mystery. The four embark on a pharmacologically fueled journey from England to Cap d'Antibes to Big Sur, leading to a surprising and enthralling moral and ethical dilemma. St. Aubyn brings off a seemingly effortless and provocative examination of the mind and its refractions. This one's not to be missed.