The Miranda
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- $15.99
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
The volunteer would complain, of course. I suppose he couldn’t help it. He felt angry or self-righteous or betrayed. He said this was not what he’d signed up for, this was breaking a promise, breaking the rules, this was not the way the good guys conducted themselves. He might say this was a violation of his human rights, a war crime, a crime anyway. And I’d say, “You’re probably right,” and then continued with the process.
Joe’s got a lot to think about, and time on his hands to do it, since divorcing his wife and quitting his job training volunteers for a shadowy government agency. The otherwise nondescript house he’s just moved into boasts one key feature: a circular path in an overgrown backyard, on which Joe plans to walk twenty-five miles a day for a thousand days. Joe figures that walking the circumference of the Earth―safely on his own patch of territory ―might just be the thing he needs to move on with his life.
But curious neighbors keep sharing their troubles and preoccupations, looping Joe into mundane intrigues, and unwittingly triggering Joe to use the unique problem-solving skills he learned on his old job. With the help of an aspiring bartender, who tests her experimental cocktail recipes as he walks, and philosophical advice from his mailman, Joe stays on pace despite the distractions. But it doesn’t matter how quickly he walks, the past is catching up to Joe, and for the first time, he must prepare himself (and not others) for the worst.
A brilliant novel by a master storyteller, The Miranda is at turns a biting satire about the secrets we keep from our neighbors, and about the invisible and unceasing state of war in which most Westerners unconsciously live.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The reader meets Joe Johnson, the articulate narrator of Nicholson's sharp and thought-provoking novel, at a crossroads in his life. He has recently quit his job, working on unspecified projects involving torture for a bureaucratic group known as the Team. He and wife Carole have divorced, and he's moved into a new house. The novel ignores conventional plot in favor of episodic encounters that trigger cultural, literary, and historical references and observations. For example, Joe's current life plan is an epic walk, inspired by the prison peregrinations of Albert Speer not as a role model, since he was a Nazi, but as a "fellow traveler." As Speer was limited by his incarceration, Joe will confine himself to a circuit in his back yard. Recording his progress will be a major component of the project, eliciting references to Bruce Chatwin, Rousseau, and others. A flyer on his car leads him to the title character, a Jill-of-all-trades, who becomes his sidekick. The human tendency to violence, the ubiquity of the internet, and the arrogant intrusiveness of the outside world are just some of the themes Nicholson skewers in this sophisticated satire, and indeed the book is at its best during its droll and subtle needling of contemporary American life.