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Gone: A Novel

2012-03-29 
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 Gone: A Novel


基本信息·出版社:Henry Holt & Company
·页码:256 页
·出版日期:2002年02月
·ISBN:0805067752
·条形码:9780805067750
·装帧:精装
·正文语种:英语
·外文书名:消逝(小说)

内容简介 在线阅读本书
作者简介 Born and raised in Dublin, Martin Roper received an M.F.A. from the University of Iowa. He teaches writing at the University of Iowa's Irish Writing Program at Trinity College, Dublin, and at University College, Dublin. Gone is his first novel.

媒体推荐 From Booklist
Still reeling from the death of his sister, Stephen, a young Irish writer, soon has to deal with the dissolution of his marriage to the austere Ursula. The two have grown increasingly combative, and their home has turned into a veritable prison as a gang of casually violent children terrorizes them with alarming audacity. Stephen finally reaches his breaking point and accepts a menial job in New York City. Here he embarks on an affair with Holfy, a worldly photographer several years his senior, who challenges him to reexamine his notion of art and pushes his writing into new directions. Their intensely physical relationship (which Roper describes in frank and explicit detail) suffers, however, as Stephen finds himself drawn back to Ursula and his ailing father. In his debut novel, Roper adroitly tackles many ambitious themes: the power dynamics of a relationship, the nature of an artist, and issues of childhood abandonment. His concise and poetic stream-of-consciousness narrative will draw readers into this fast-paced novel of love and loss. Brendan Dowling
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
"Gone is a marvelously nasty novel about love in our time. If you are actually a human being this novel will pull strongly at your heart, and despite its emotional brutality it is well worth the trip."-Jim Harrison, author of The Beast God Forgot to Invent

"Roper has created a world so richly peopled, so fully imagined, that it's hard not to believe these events are taking place just around the corner. A deep pleasure."-Margo Livesey, author of Eva Moves the Furniture
专业书评 From Publishers Weekly
With an unflinching and at times painful honesty, Roper's debut novel incisively explores the brutality of intimate relationships. Stephen, an angry young Dublin factory worker and aspiring writer struggles with the loss of his 19-year-old sister to cancer and the disintegration of his marriage to a controlling, bitter journalist, Ursula. He and Ursula marry early, "in love with notions of each other," but their marriage begins to collapse as they renovate a house she buys. Relentlessly tormented by a sadistic gang of neighborhood kids, they are unable to offer each other solace, and when Stephen gets the chance to move to New York, he takes it. In the city, where "life moves too quickly... to let memories gather," he begins a titillating and sometimes violent affair with Holfy, an independent photographer 15 years his senior, while still corresponding with Ursula. His tortured analysis of his interaction with these two very different women drives the novel. Though it lacks a conventional plot and is sometimes frustratingly vague on practical details Stephen seems to earn a living only sporadically, and his aims as a writer are unclear the book achieves an impressive consistency of tone and purpose. Roper has a keen and unforgiving eye for the little cruelties of love, and his perspicacious psychological explorations offer startling insight into the nature of artistic creation, death, pain, pleasure, desire and hatred. Agent, Beth Vesel. (Feb.)Forecast: Excerpted in the New Yorker and highly praised by Jim Harrison and Margot Livesey, this astringent novel, akin to Hanif Kureishi's darker work, should appeal to readers interested in an unsentimental examination of relations between men and women.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.



From Library Journal
In his first novel, Irish writer Roper uses precise and dramatic language to deal with family strife, cancer deaths, and failed interpersonal relationships. First-person narrator Stephen, an angry young Dubliner, watches his younger sister succumb to cancer. Then his relationship with his intelligent and bluntly independent wife becomes strained by her growing interest in her career as a poet and journalist, his own restless dissatisfaction, and the constant besieging of their house in Irish Town by a group of evil neighborhood children. Stephen drifts into an affair and finally decides to move to New York City, where he commences a strange and contentious relationship with an older woman who is a successful photographer involved in the Lower Manhattan art scene. In the end, he leaves her as well and begins a journey back to Ireland that leads him to confront and begin to understand himself and his past. In intense and edgy scenes, Roper's characters jab at each other like fighters, testing limits, making discoveries, and sometimes literally drawing blood. Dialog is woven from a continuous flow of comments, observations, and memories. Poignant and jarring, this skillfully written work is recommended for academic and larger public libraries. Jim Coan, SUNY at Oneonta Lib.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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