Fox
A Novel
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3.8 • 172 Ratings
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
NATIONAL BESTSELLER • An “enthralling” (Los Angeles Times) and “remarkably engrossing” (The New York Times Book Review, Editors’ Choice) novel of literary and psychological suspense about the dark secrets that surface after the shocking disappearance of a charismatic, mercurial teacher at an elite boarding school—by legendary author Joyce Carol Oates
“Eerie, shocking, provoking, and beautifully written.”—Gillian Flynn
“I found it mesmerizing front to back.”—Michael Connelly
“I can’t remember the last time I read something so (darkly, disconcertingly) addictive.”—Rebecca Makkai
“An extraordinary novel . . . unlike any other mystery I’ve read.”—Joseph Finder
“Tom Ripley, eat your heart out.”—NPR
“A classic psychological suspense.”—People
“A dark, daring plunge into literary suspense . . . Oates dissects the predator-prey dynamic with merciless precision.”—The Seattle Times
A HARPER’S BAZAAR AND PUBLISHERS WEEKLY BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR
Who is Francis Fox? A charming English teacher new to the idyllic Langhorne Academy, Fox beguiles many of his students, their parents, and his colleagues at the elite boarding school, while leaving others wondering where he came from and why his biography is so enigmatic. When two brothers discover Fox’s car half-submerged in a pond in a local nature preserve and parts of an unidentified body strewn about the nearby woods, the entire community, including Detective Horace Zwender and his deputy, begins to ask disturbing questions about Francis Fox and who he might really be.
A hypnotic, galloping tale of crime and complicity, revenge and restitution, victim vs. predator, Joyce Carol Oates’s Fox illuminates the darkest corners of the human psyche while asking profound moral questions about justice and the response evil demands. A character as magnetically diabolical as Patricia Highsmith’s Tom Ripley and Vladimir Nabokov’s Humbert Humbert, Francis Fox enchants and manipulates nearly everyone around him, until at last he meets someone he can’t outfox. Written in Oates’s trademark intimate, sweeping style, and interweaving multiple points of view, Fox is a triumph of craftsmanship and artistry, a novel as profound as it is propulsive, as moving as it is full of mystery.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
An exclusive boarding school serves as the enticing backdrop for this shocking literary thriller from legendary author Joyce Carol Oates. Charming English teacher Francis Fox is a favorite among the staff and students at Langhorne Academy, with many of the tween girls vying for his attention. But when his body is found torn to shreds in a local nature preserve, a look into his past reveals a sinister side that sends the small New Jersey town spinning. Oates’ evocative prose paints a vivid portrait of a community in turmoil and the man at the center of it all—a proverbial fox in the henhouse. From the vulnerable student Mary Ann Healy, who was ruthlessly preyed upon, to the stoic detective Horace Zwender, tasked with the grim job of finding the killer, all of her characters are meticulously crafted with loving detail. Fox offers an unwavering look at the dark, unflattering truths about what it means to be manipulated.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This captivating whodunit from Oates (Butcher) dives into the twisted mind of a pedophile and the mystery behind his untimely death. Francis Fox, the charming new 30-something English teacher at Langhorne Academy in 2013 New Jersey, grooms his female middle school students by encouraging their writing before kissing and fondling them in his office during private meetings. His career began in Pennsylvania, where he quietly left a school after one of his victims died by suicide (the girl left behind evidence of their inappropriate relationship in her diary, but Francis's lawyer saved him with some dirty tricks). Steeled by quotes from Kierkegaard ("The crowd is a lie"; "The individual is the highest truth") and delusions of his virtue compared to Nabokov's "sick pervert" Humbert Humbert, Francis remains unrepentant. Over the course of the nonlinear narrative, in which a dismembered body discovered at a pond near Langhorne is eventually identified as Francis's, Oates gradually unravels the story of how Fox wound up at Langhorne and his body wound up at the pond. Francis's warped logic is as irresistible as Oates's wonderfully bizarre descriptions (in one scene, Francis strolls past seagull droppings that look to him "like leprosy or the acne of a brain beset by spurious notions of guilt not his own but foisted upon him by dwarf-souled others"). Oates is at the top of her game.
Customer Reviews
Painful but brilliant
Long, dark, horrifying, difficult to read at times, but utterly brilliant writing. I wanted it to be over but I'm glad I read it.
Surprising ending
Loved the mystery of it.
Incredible
Very long but incredible story of abuse.