The Pesthouse, Jim Crace
The Pesthouse, Jim Crace
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The Pesthouse

Author: Jim Crace

Narrator: Michael Kramer

Unabridged: 8 hr 23 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 06/05/2007


Synopsis

Once the safest, most prosperous place on earth, the United States is now a lawless, scantly populated wasteland. The machines have stopped. The government has collapsed. Farmlands lie fallow and the soil is contaminated by toxins. Across the country, families have packed up their belongings to travel eastward toward the one hope left: passage on a ship to Europe.

Franklin Lopez and his brother, Jackson, are only days away from the ocean when Franklin, nearly crippled by an inflamed knee, is forced to stop. In the woods near his temporary refuge, Franklin comes upon an isolated stone building. Inside he finds Margaret, a woman with a deadly infection and confined to the Pesthouse to sweat out her fever. Tentatively, the two join forces and make their way through the ruins of old America. Confronted by bandits rounding up men for slavery, finding refuge in the Ark, a religious community that makes bizarre demands on those they shelter, Franklin and Margaret find their wariness of each other replaced by deep trust and an intimacy neither one has ever experienced before.

THE PESTHOUSE is Jim Crace’s most compelling novel to date. Rich in its understanding of America’s history and ethos, it is a paean to the human spirit.

About The Author

Jim Crace is the author of 11 novels. Being Dead was shortlisted for the 1999 Whitbread Fiction Prize and won the US National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction in 2000. In 1997, Quarantine was named the Whitbread Novel of the Year and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. Crace has also received the E. M. Forster Award and the Guardian Fiction Prize. He lives in England.Michael Kramer is an actor, director, and narrator. He has recorded more than 100 audiobooks, as well as titles for the Library of Congress Talking Books program. Among the recognition he has garnered for his narration are AudioFile magazine’s Earphones Award and the Torgi Award. Mr. Kramer lives in Washington, DC, where he is active in the area’s theater scene, and has appeared in productions at the Shakespeare Theatre, the Kennedy Center, and Theater J.


Reviews

Goodreads review by karen

if you have read the road, you don't really need to read this. this was to be jim crace's third strike from me. and i don't dislike jim crace, it's just i wasn't wowed by either quarantine or being dead. his style is not embracing - it has the same detached, clinical style as hustvedt, which does no......more

Mnogo volim da čitam distopijske i postapokaliptične romane, što su verovatno svi koji prate moje review-e mogli da skontaju... Neke romane Džima Krejsa odavno imam zahvaljujući tome što čitalački mejnstrim u Srbiji nije prepoznao njegove kvalitete pa ih je Laguna prodavala po niskim cenama... Tek n......more

Goodreads review by Bob

Leave it to Jim Crace, an author who typically works with something known and then presents it entirely askew, to write a novel about medieval America. Medieval America? Well, not exactly, but almost. The America in The Pesthouse is set in the future but the world is entirely medieval—a premodern wo......more


Quotes

"A writer of hallucinatory skill." —John Updike“Crace is one of Britain’s most remarkable writers.” —Richard Eder, The New York Times“One will watch with eagerness, and bated breath, the progress of this strong, inventive, and above all courageous novelist.” —John Banville, The New York Review of Books“[Crace] has always exhibited an uncanny gift for tapping into the horrors that wake us, heart pounding, in the middle of the night. He is fascinated by the extremes of existence, and he knows our demons by name…. It’s a tribute to Crace’s skill that we so rapidly get our bearings in [The Pesthouse’s] radically altered landscape…. Crace can write amazingly well…. When he’s on…he’s stellar.”–Francine Prose, The New York Times Book Review “[Crace’s] characters beguile readers with their emotional authenticity and detailed psychologies. His prose carries the contours of a Donatello sculpture as Crace chisels gracefully flowing sentences with eloquence, precision and the occasional cheeky hint of the impish.”–San Francisco Chronicle “Jim Crace is a writer about plain things, but he writes about them in a way that’s both startling and subtle, a shimmering surface over still depths.”–Washington Post Book World "At one level, The Pesthouse is a suspenseful road novel...but at its heart, it is a meditation on deep questions about America: the costs of relentless expansion, the fate of a wasteful industrial society."–Los Angeles TimesThe Pesthouse is a moving tale, a tour de force of imagination and ingenuity, written in a language that even the best poets would admire.”–World Literature Today“Tumescence, finely suggested in the author’s stately, faintly archaic prose, pulses this strange story and stops the heart as no consummation would…. Mr. Crace is the coldest of writers, and the tenderest.”–Richard Eder, The New York Times“Mr. Crace’s phantom America is a rich and strange creation.”–The New York Sun“A powerful but subtly rendered novel about the choices people make when there seem to be no choices…. Issues of family (blood or formed), religious faith, fate and the refusal to submit to it enrich an engrossing novel that may be the richest and most ambitious of the renowned author’s career.”–Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “At its core, The Pesthouse is a love story, albeit one played out in a landscape of calamity. Indeed, in its own way, it is a tender book, quiet and interior, and exploration of the heart...”–Bookforum