Testimony
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- 34,99 zł
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- 34,99 zł
Publisher Description
At a New England boarding school, a sex scandal is about to break. Even more shocking than the sexual acts themselves is the fact that they were caught on videotape. A Pandora's box of revelations, the tape triggers a chorus of voice -- those of the men, women, teenagers, and parents involved in the scandal -- that details the ways in which lives can be derailed or destroyed in one foolish moment.
A gripping emotional drama with the pace of a thriller, Anita Shreve's Testimony explores the dark impulses that sway the lives of seeming innocents, and the ways in which our best intentions can lead to our worst transgressions.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Told from more than a dozen perspectives, Testimony follows the shockwaves that roll out after the discovery of a teen sex tape. Anita Shreve’s storytelling style is direct and, at times, unnervingly bold, but she’s not in it for the controversy. She unpacks personal and school politics and pays careful attention to human emotion. Bound up in everyday morality, Shreve’s novel is an unflinching reminder that everyone has something to protect.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Shreve's novels (Body Surfing; The Weight of Water) benefit from propulsive plots, and her mixed latest, with its timely theme of debauchery among children of privilege, does not lack in this regard. The first paragraph foreshadows a tragedy in which three marriages are destroyed, the lives of three students at a private school in Vermont are ruined, and death claims an innocent victim. The precipitating event is a sex tape involving three members of the boys' basketball team and a freshman girl. Beginning with an account of the debacle by the Avery School's then headmaster, and segueing to the voices of the participants in the orgy, plus their parents and others touched by the scandal, the narrative explores the widening consequences of a single event. Shreve's character delineation is astute, and the novel's moral questions ranging from the boys' behavior to the headmaster's breach of legal ethics to the guilt of those involved in the death are salient if heavy-handed, while the female characters are "wicked" in the way women have always been stereotypically portrayed. The novel is clever, but the revolving cast of narrators often feels predictable and forced, keeping the novel on the near side of credible.