Record Details
Book cover

The sea

Banville, John (Author).

A middle-aged English man returns to the place of his childhood holidays, by the sea, in an attempt to come to terms with the loss of his wife and how to proceed with his new life.

Book  - 2005
FIC Banvi
3 copies / 1 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Stamford Available
Victoria Available
Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 0307263118
  • Physical Description print
    195 pages
  • Edition 1st American ed.
  • Publisher New York : Alfred. A. Knopf, 2005.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Winner of the Man Booker Prize.
"A Borzoi book"--T.p. verso.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 29.95

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Summary for ISBN Number 0307263118
The Sea
The Sea
by Banville, John
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Summary

The Sea


The author of The Untouchable ("contemporary fiction gets no better than this"--Patrick McGrath, The New York Times Book Review ) now gives us a luminous novel about love, loss, and the unpredictable power of memory. The narrator is Max Morden, a middle-aged Irishman who, soon after his wife's death, has gone back to the seaside town where he spent his summer holidays as a child--a retreat from the grief, anger, and numbness of his life without her. But it is also a return to the place where he met the Graces, the well-heeled vacationing family with whom he experienced the strange suddenness of both love and death for the first time. The seductive mother; the imperious father; the twins--Chloe, fiery and forthright, and Myles, silent and expressionless--in whose mysterious connection Max became profoundly entangled, each of them a part of the "barely bearable raw immediacy" of his childhood memories. Interwoven with this story are Morden's memories of his wife, Anna--of their life together, of her death--and the moments, both significant and mundane, that make up his life now: his relationship with his grown daughter, Claire, desperate to pull him from his grief; and with the other boarders at the house where he is staying, where the past beats inside him "like a second heart." What Max comes to understand about the past, and about its indelible effects on him, is at the center of this elegiac, vividly dramatic, beautifully written novel--among the finest we have had from this extraordinary writer.