The Late Americans
From the Booker Prize-shortlisted author of Real Life
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- USD 10.99
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- USD 10.99
Descripción editorial
‘Funny, merciless, brilliant . . . I loved it’ CURTIS SITTENFELD
Seamus, Fyodor, Ivan, Noah and Fatima are running out of time to decide on their futures, in the new novel from the Booker-shortlisted author of Real Life.
In a university town, a circle of lovers and friends navigate tangled webs of connection while they try to work out what they want, and who they are.
As they test their own desires in a series of relationships, these young men and women ask themselves and each other: what is the right thing to stake a life on? Work, love, money, dance, poetry? And what does true connection look like, in an age of precarity?
‘A constellation of characters shines in [this] campus-set tale of aspiring artists’ Financial Times
‘Intimate, hilarious, poignant . . . A gorgeously written novel of youth’s promise’ Oprah Daily
‘Elegant and razor-sharp’ EMMA CLINE
* A Daily Telegraph and FT Book of the Year *
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Taylor (Filthy Animals) offers a perceptive chronicle of graduate students and their townie lovers in Iowa City. Seamus, a white poet in the MFA program, is embittered, having been told by his classmates and professor that his poems aren't relevant to the contemporary discourse. After a rough sexual encounter with Bert, an older man whose father is a patient in the hospice where Seamus works as a cook, Seamus throws his energy into a new poem. There's also Fyodor and Timo, two Black men in an on-again/off-again relationship, their tensions sparked by Fyodor's resentment of Timo's comfortable middle-class origins, which put him on a path to study math and music, and by vegetarian Timo's outrage at Fyodor for working in a meatpacking plant. Ivan and Goran, another couple, fight about not having sex anymore, then sleep with other people instead. The various episodes don't quite cohere, but Taylor's characters come to life as they face unbridgeable gaps and their frustrations mount. Though economic privilege drives a wedge in many of the characters' relationships, their sexual desires and shared uncertainty about the future keep them tumbling along together through scenes cut with razor-sharp observations (here's Timo, asked what kind of math he studies: "A pointless grasp at specificity, leading nowhere in particular"). With verve and wit, Taylor pulls off something like Sally Rooney for the Midwest. Correction: An earlier version of this review misstated the race of one of the characters.