From "a fiercely intelligent writer" (The New York Times), a wry, poignant story of the difficult love between a mother and a son In the winter of 2000, shortly after his mother's death from cancer and malnourishment, Donald Antrim, author of the absurdist, visionary masterworks Elect Mr. Robinson for a Better World, The Hundred Brothers, and The Verificationist, began writing about his family. In pieces that appeared in The New Yorker and were anthologized in Best American Essays, Antrim explored his intense and complicated relationships with his mother, Louanne, an artist and teacher who was, at her worst, a ferociously destabilized and destabilizing alcoholic; his gentle grandfather, who lived in the mountains of North Carolina and who always hoped to save his daughter from herself; and his father, who married Louanne twice.
The Afterlife is not a temporally linear coming-of-age memoir; instead, Antrim follows a logic of unconscious life, of dreams and memories, of fantasies and psychoses, the way in which the world of the alcoholic becomes a sleepless, atemporal world. In it, he comes to terms with-and fails to comes to terms with-the nature of addiction and the broken states of loneliness, shame, and loss that remain beyond his power to fully repair. This is a tender and even blackly hilarious portrait of a family-faulty, cracked, enraging. It is also the story of the way the author works, in part through writing this book, to become a man more fully alive to himself and to others, a man capable of a life in which he may never learn, or ever hope to know, the nature of his origins.
The Afterlife is not a temporally linear coming-of-age memoir; instead, Antrim follows a logic of unconscious life, of dreams and memories, of fantasies and psychoses, the way in which the world of the alcoholic becomes a sleepless, atemporal world. In it, he comes to terms with-and fails to comes to terms with-the nature of addiction and the broken states of loneliness, shame, and loss that remain beyond his power to fully repair. This is a tender and even blackly hilarious portrait of a family-faulty, cracked, enraging. It is also the story of the way the author works, in part through writing this book, to become a man more fully alive to himself and to others, a man capable of a life in which he may never learn, or ever hope to know, the nature of his origins.
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Used availability for Donald Antrim's The Afterlife
See all available used copies of this book at: Abebooks UK or Abebooks US
Hardback Editions
2007 : Hardback
| Title: Afterlife (Uk Edition) Author(s): Donald Antrim ISBN: 0-316-72979-5 / 978-0-316-72979-6 (USA edition) Publisher: LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY Availability: Amazon Amazon UK More details... |
May 2006 : Hardback
| Title: The Afterlife Author(s): Donald Antrim ISBN: 0-374-29961-7 / 978-0-374-29961-3 (USA edition) Publisher: Farrar Straus Giroux Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA More details... |
1980 : Hardback
| Title: The Afterlife: a Memoir Author(s): Donald Antrim Publisher: Farrar Straus Giroux Availability: Amazon More details... |
Paperback Editions
May 2008 : Paperback
| Title: The Afterlife Author(s): Donald Antrim ISBN: 0-349-11870-1 / 978-0-349-11870-3 (UK edition) Publisher: Abacus Availability: Amazon Amazon UK More details... |
May 2007 : Paperback
| Title: The Afterlife: A Memoir Author(s): Donald Antrim ISBN: 0-312-42635-6 / 978-0-312-42635-4 (USA edition) Publisher: Picador Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA More details... |
January 2006 : Paperback
| Title: The Afterlife: A Memoir Author(s): Donald Antrim Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York, New York, U.S.A. Availability: Amazon More details... |
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