Xstabeth, David Keenan
Xstabeth, David Keenan
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Xstabeth
A Novel

Author: David Keenan

Narrator: Louise Brealey

Unabridged: 4 hr 45 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: White Rabbit

Published: 11/12/2020


Synopsis

INCLUDES 'PREQUEL' THE TOWER THE FIELDS THE TRANSMITTERS

'This book spoke, it said "read me" from the very first sentence as if it were alive, it gave me visceral joy' Kim Gordon

'Reading [Xstabeth] feels like being cut open to the accompanying sound of ecstatic music' Edna O'Brien

'Prepare for more of that inimitable Keenan narrative voodoo brilliance' Wendy Erskine

In St Petersburg, Russia, Aneliya is torn between the love of her father and her father's best friend. Her father dreams of becoming a great musician but suffers with a naivete that means he will never be taken seriously. Her father's best friend has a penchant for vodka, strip clubs and moral philosophy.

When an angelic presence named Xstabeth enters their lives - a presence who simultaneously fulfils and disappears those she touches - Aneliya and her father's world is transformed.

Moving from Russia to St Andrews, Scotland, Xstabeth tackles the metaphysics of golf, the mindset of classic Russian novels and the power of art and music to re-wire reality. Charged with a consuming intensity and a torrential rhythm that pulses with music, it is an offering of transcendence and a love letter to the books of Chandler, Nabokov and Dostoevsky, by a writer who is rewriting the rulebook of contemporary fiction.

About David Keenan

David Keenan is the author of six critically-acclaimed novels; the cult classic This is Memorial Device, which won the London Magazine Prize; For the Good Times, which won the Gordon Burn Prize and was shortlisted for the Encore Award; The Towers The Fields The Transmitters, Xstabeth, which was shortlisted for the Dublin Literary Award, Monument Maker, which was a Rough Trade Book of the Year and Industry of Magic & Light. He is also the author of England's Hidden Reverse, a history of the UK's post-punk and Industrial music scenes. He has been writing about music since he was seventeen years old, most consistently for The Wire, and between the years 2004-2014 he co-ran the cult Glasgow record shop Volcanic Tongue.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Meike on October 28, 2021

An experimental ghost story feat. explicit sex scenes, Russian roulette, and an ephemeral muse that possesses people in order to create mystical beauty - you have to give it to Keenan that this is quite a concept! The Scottish author sticks to his favorite theme, music, and gives us a young narrator......more

Goodreads review by Paul on February 08, 2021

So my books are mysteries to myself. I can’t get to the bottom of Xstabeth. It feels like a living thing to me, an organism. A manifesting of angel Xstabeth. A hallucinogenic love story about a young girl torn between the love of her father and her father’s creative rival and best friend. A detectiv......more

Goodreads review by Paul on November 04, 2022

Disappointing. Don't believe the blurb which implies Xstabeth is more real than it actually is. All I can say is that stuff happens to no particular effect interrupted by random interpolations from fictious writers.......more

Goodreads review by Ben on December 06, 2020

Xstabeth is a presence haunting the pages of David Keenan's new novella, and the entity's tale is told here via the ingenuous music of Aneliya's folk singer father strumming his guitar to an an audience of ten in a club's darkened back room. Their journey from Russia to Scotland is a meditation on t......more

Goodreads review by ExtraGravy on November 25, 2022

Um. Hm. Interesting.......more


Quotes

Prepare for more of that inimitable Keenan narrative voodoo brilliance. In Xstabeth it'll give you a special and magickal alchemy of metaphysics, singer-songwriters and golf, angelic entities, memory and grace. What a thrill to take this remarkable trip to St Andrews and Russia, in the arms of music and synchronicity

I sometimes think David Keenan dreams aloud. His prose has the effortless, enigmatic , unsettling quality of dream. In Xstabeth, as with For the Good Times, the narrative shuttles between episodes of nearness and chasm ... Reading it feels like being cut open to the accompanying sound of ecstatic music

This book spoke, it said "read me" from the very first sentence as if it were alive, it gave me visceral joy and a constant feeling of being unhinged so I had to keep up with it

A delicious, dark and haunting book, from the first page I couldn't let it go and I know Xstabeth will stay with me for ever. The book contains magic and intrigue. It is a 21st century cult classic

Inspiring and brilliant

XSTABETH is special. A ghostly shimmer of a novel

You can lose yourself in the novel's weird loops and whorls, searching for resolution while luxuriating in the lack of it . . . This is Keenan's most gnomic, gnostic work yet - at times it seems only loosely tethered to reality - yet it's never portentous. There's something here of the 19th-century Russian novelists' passion for authenticity, their fervid drama. There are funny lines, too, which undercut the mysticism in a satisfyingly earthy way . . . the sense of a synchronous world being created even as you read, where past visions spark memories that echo the present, leaping across synaptic gaps with the grace of a bird in flight Guardian

As close to a song as any prose work I've read. And Keenan is gloriously, unfashionably mystical in his approach Irish Times

It is one of the most interesting novels I've come across this year. Reading it, I felt the unmistakable pulse of something living, and it isn't done with me yet Literary Review

In a record shop in St Andrews, Aneliya and her father come across a Russian pressing of the Xstabeth record. The man behind the counter puts it on. "Pure loner folk," he says admiringly. "A genre of one." The same might be said of this gloriously sui generis novel Financial Times