
A View of the Empire at Sunset
Author: Caryl Phillips
Narrator: Justine Eyre
Unabridged: 7 hr 32 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 05/22/2018
Categories: Fiction, Literary Fiction, Historical Fiction

Author: Caryl Phillips
Narrator: Justine Eyre
Unabridged: 7 hr 32 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 05/22/2018
Categories: Fiction, Literary Fiction, Historical Fiction
Caryl Phillips is the author of numerous works of fiction and nonfiction, including Dancing in the Dark, Crossing the River, Color Me English, and The Lost Child. His novel A Distant Shore won the Commonwealth Writers Prize, and his other awards include a Lannan Literary Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and Britain’s oldest literary award, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and lives in New York.
Justine Eyre is a classically trained actress who has narrated many audiobooks, earning the prestigious Audie Award for best narration and numerous Earphones Awards. She is multilingual and known for her great facility with accents. She has appeared on stage, with leading roles in King Lear and The Crucible, and has had starring roles in four films on the indie circuit. Her television credits include Two and a Half Men and Mad Men.
Good God, what a gloomy book. The sections in sun-drenched Dominica are gloomy, the parts in dank, unfriendly pre-war England are gloomy, Gwen's depressed, and everyone else in the book is on the brink of suicide, or maybe just past. No, I couldn't finish. I was very excited about this novel consider......more
“Narrator Justine Eyre sounds simultaneously enticing and embittered in Phillips’ interesting novelization of the life of author Jean Rhys. That’s just as it should be, as Rhys was famously troubled and talented…The audio format gives Eyre ample scope to explore warring aspects of Rhys’s personality—sour and alluring, drunk and innocent—and to people the recording with vibrant vocal portraits of English voices, as well as Rhys’ Welsh father and Creole mother, and the many islanders.” AudioFile
“Two writers haunted by their Caribbean past…[A] remarkable novel…[An] austere, evocative investigation of a life caught ‘somewhere between colored and white.’ It is a novel of acute psychological empathy and understanding.” New York Times Book Review
“Under [Phillips’] deft hand, the prose subtly implies more than it tells…Phillips illuminates the irony of global race relations.” Christian Science Monitor
“You can taste Rhys, but it’s still Phillips’exotic stew…His narrative is about homeland, family, alienation, loneliness, and need. His Gwennie is a masterfully drawn character, as dissolute, yet as determined, as Rhys’ tragic characters…His sentences are as sharp as etchings in glass.” Memphis Flyer
“Explores with rigor and artistry the ever-after effects of the toxic double-helix of racism and imperialism embodied in the African diaspora…Phillips’ bravura, empathic, and unnerving performance makes the real-world achievement of his muse all the more surprising and significant.” Booklist (starred review)
“Haunting…Phillips is at his best in this powerful evocation of Rhys’ vision, which illuminates both her time and the present.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Phillips traces Rhys’s life from her birth in Dominica to her miserable years in Edwardian England and return in 1936 to her beloved Caribbean home. In the process, he addresses fraught issues of colonization.” Library Journal