Mourning Wood
a novel
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- 9,49 €
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- 9,49 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
A fading star, a staged death, and a search for legacy in a darkly comedic novel of Hollywood and small-town life.
Terence Wood, a Hollywood icon past his prime, orchestrates his own demise, seeking anonymity in a Maine coastal town. But his plans unravel as his aspiring filmmaker son, his eccentric ex-wives, and a down-on-his-luck obituary writer descend, each chasing Wood's elusive legacy. Amidst the chaos, they grapple with love, loss, and the absurdity of existence.
Is this for you? If you enjoy character-driven stories with a satirical edge, Mourning Wood offers a caustic yet heartwarming exploration of:
Escaping a life of fameFinding meaning in unexpected placesThe enduring power of family, however unconventional
Dive into this darkly humorous tale where life, death, and lobster rolls collide, and discover what it truly means to leave a mark.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Paisner, a frequent collaborator on celebrity bios, plays a cheeky game of cat-and-mouse in his debut novel, which revolves around a famous but fading movie actor who fakes his death and creates a bizarre new existence for himself. Terence Wood is the thespian protagonist whose encounter with the muddy, icy roads of coastal Maine proves disastrous when his SUV goes off a cliff and into the water. Wood survives the accident, but instead of reporting it and providing the media with more celebrity scandal, the Maine native decides to hide out in a nearby fishing village, where he lands an unlikely gig working as a costumed lobster in a local theme park and falls for an overweight but attractive diner waitress called Grace, who is nicknamed "Two Stools." Meanwhile, an obituary writer for a prominent Maine paper named Axel Pimletz lands a book deal to polish an autobiographical manuscript Wood left behind, after fraudulently pasting together a final newspaper tribute to Wood. Pimletz struggles to finish the book with a libidinous assist from one of Wood's ex-wives. Paisner's terse but breezy style makes for a fast, engaging read, and Wood has more than enough character to carry the novel, especially with some strong comic relief from the hapless, bumbling Pimletz. But the ex-wife gags fall flat; another tangent involving the travails of Wood's son, Norman, is perfunctory; and despite Pimletz's funny moments, the potential of the biography subplot goes largely unrealized. Paisner recovers nicely with a sharp, funny ending, but the novel's various parts never quite cohere.