Inlibris.com RSS
in association with
  Amazon.com
 
WelcomeYour BookSame AuthorSimilarYour SearchYour History
 Find 
 
  

Recommended author
Andrei Makine
Double Vision: A Novel
by Pat Barker

Cover image   Availability: Not available new from Amazon.com

Edition: Hardcover
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux (2003-12-09)
ISBN-10/ISBN-13: 0374209057 / 9780374209056
Amazon.com Sales Rank: 3032588

Other editions
Paperback (Picador $18.00) | Hardcover ($23.00)
 
Fiction

Inferno (Robert Langdon)
Dan Brown

The Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald

And the Mountains Echoed
Khaled Hosseini

A Song of Ice and Fire, Books 1-4 (A Game of Thrones / A Feast for Crows / A Storm of Swords / Clash of Kings)
George R.R. Martin

Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls
David Sedaris

Dead Ever After: A Sookie Stackhouse Novel (Sookie Stackhouse/True Blood)
Charlaine Harris

Entwined with You (A Crossfire Novel)
Sylvia Day

Fifty Shades of Grey: Book One of the Fifty Shades Trilogy
E L James

The Woman Upstairs
Claire Messud

Joyland
Stephen King

A 2004 Vacation Reading (selected by The New York Times)
“Barker's latest novel describes a single English winter in the lives of a handful of interconnected characters, starting with Kate, a newly widowed sculptor, and the sinister young man who becomes her assistant after she is disabled in a car crash. He in turn is a former lover of a 19-year-old girl who is now involved with a foreign correspondent who was working with Kate's husband when he died.”

Book description
A gripping novel about the effects of violence on the journalists and artists who have dedicated themselves to representing it

In the aftermath of September 11, reeling from the effects of reporting from New York City, two British journalists, a writer, Stephen Sharkey, and a photographer, Ben Frobisher, part ways. Stephen, facing the almost simultaneous discovery that his wife is having an affair, returns to England shattered; he divorces and quits his job. Ben returns to his vocation. He follows the war on terror to Afghanistan and is killed.

Stephen retreats to a cottage in the country to write a book about violence, and what he sees as the reporting journalist's or photographer's complicity in it; it is a book that will build in large part on Ben's writing and photography. Ben's widow, Kate, a sculptor, lives nearby, and as she and Stephen learn about each other their world speedily shrinks, in pleasing but also disturbing ways; Stephen's maid, with whom he has begun an affair, was once lovers with Kate's new studio assistant, an odd local man named Peter. As these connections become clear, Peter's strange behavior around Stephen and Kate begins to take on threatening implications. The sinister events that take place in this small town, so far from the theaters of war Stephen has retreated from, will force him to act instinctively, violently, and to face his most painful revelations about himself.


With Good Reviews


More info
Woman's World
Graham Rawle

Interested in a used copy? Do you need more information?

Recommend this book


RSS OPML • This site is PDA-friendlyAmazon.com prices subject to change
www.inlibris.com and www.badosa.com, idea, design and development: Xavier Badosa Go to top