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The Nobodies Album
by 
Carolyn Parkhurst
Kimberly Farr
  
Publisher: Books on Tape
Subject(s):  Fiction
Language(s):  English
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OverDrive WMA Audiobook add to cart
Available copies:  
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File size:   163264 KB
ISBN:   9780307714725
Release date:   Jun 15, 2010

Description

From the bestselling author of The Dogs of Babel comes a dazzling literary mystery about the lengths to which some people will go to rewrite their past.

Bestselling novelist Octavia Frost has just completed her latest book--a revolutionary novel in which she has rewritten the last chapters of all her previous books, removing clues about her personal life concealed within, especially a horrific tragedy that befell her family years ago.

On her way to deliver the manuscript to her editor, Octavia reads a news crawl in Times Square and learns that her rock-star son, Milo, has been arrested for murder. Though she and Milo haven't spoken in years--an estrangement stemming from that tragic day--she drops everything to go to him.

The "last chapters" of Octavia's novel are layered throughout The Nobodies Album--the scattered puzzle pieces to her and Milo's dark and troubled past. Did she drive her son to murder? Did Milo murder anyone at all? And what exactly happened all those years ago? As the novel builds to a stunning reveal, Octavia must consider how this story will come to a close.

Universally praised for her candid explorations of the human psyche, Parkhurst delivers an emotionally gripping and resonant mystery about a mother and her son, and about the possibility that one can never truly know another person.


From the Hardcover edition.

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Excerpts

From the book

...

Chapter One

There are some stories no one wants to hear. Some stories, once told, won't let you go so easily. I'm not talking about the tedious, the pointless, the disgusting: the bugs in your bag of flour; your hour on the phone with the insurance people; the unexplained blood in your urine. I'm talking about narratives of tragedy and pathos so painful, so compelling, that they seem to catch inside you on a tiny hook you didn't even know you'd hung. You wish for a way to pull the story back out; you grow resentful of the very breath that pushed those words into the air.

Stories like this have become a specialty of mine. It wasn't always that way; I used to try to write the kind of story everyone wanted to hear, but I soon learned what a fool's errand that was. I found out there are better ways to get you. "I wish I hadn't read it," a woman wrote to me after she finished my last novel. She sounded bewildered, and wistful for the time before she'd heard what I had to say. But isn't that the point--to write something that will last after the book has been put back on the shelf? This is the way I like it. Read my story, walk through those woods, and when you get to the other side, you may not even realize that you're carrying something out that you didn't have when you went in. A little tick of an idea, clinging to your scalp, or hidden in a fold of skin. Somewhere out of sight. By the time you discover it, it's already begun to prey on you; perhaps it's merely gouged your flesh, or perhaps it's already begun to nibble away at your central nervous system. It's a small thing, whatever it is, and whether your life will be better for it or worse, I cannot say. But something's different, something has changed.

And it's all because of me.


The plane rises. We achieve lift-off, and in that mysterious, hanging moment, I say a prayer--as I always do--to help keep us aloft. In my more idealistic days, I used to add a phrase of benediction for all the other people on the airplane, which eventually stretched into a wish for every soul who found himself away from home that day. My good will knew no bounds; or maybe I thought that the generosity of such a wish would gain me extra points and thereby ensure my own safety. But I stopped doing that a long time ago. Because, if you think about it, when has there ever been a day when all the world's travelers have been returned safely to their homes, to sleep untroubled in their beds? That's not the way it works. Better to keep your focus on yourself and leave the others to sort themselves out. Better to say a prayer for your own wellbeing and hope that, today at least, you'll be one of the lucky ones.
It's a short flight: Boston to New York, less than an hour in the air. As soon as the flight attendants can walk the aisles without listing too much, they'll be flinging pretzels at our heads in a mad effort to get everything served and cleaned up before we're back on the ground, returned to the world of adulthood, where we're free to get our own snacks.

I have in my lap, displayed rather importantly, as if it were a prop in a play no one else realizes is being performed, the manuscript of my latest book, The Nobodies Album. This is part of my ritual: there's my name, emblazoned on the first page, and if my seatmate or a wandering crew member should happen to glance over and see it--and if, furthermore, that name should happen to have any meaning for them--well then, they're free to begin a conversation with me. So far, it's never happened.

The other rite I will observe today concerns what I will do with this manuscript once I arrive in New York. This neat...

 

Reviews

Seattle Times ...
"Parkhurst's chief gift as a novelist is her ability to seize the innermost thoughts of her characters, then convey them with meticulous craft."
 
The New York Times...
"As she did in The Dogs of Babel, with its human protagonist trying to coax forth information from his dog, Ms. Parkhurst once again proves that she writes with crisp precision but can also make heads spin."
 
The New York Times Book Review...
"In The Nobodies Album, with a light but sure hand, Carolyn Parkhurst joins together four disparate literary forms: the family drama, the short story, the philosophical essay on language and, yes, the whodunit. Her weave is smooth, a vigorous hybrid of the old-fashioned, the modern and the postmodern. She reminds is what an act of will and imagination it has always taken for a writer to convert nobodies into somebodies in any genre, whether at the desk or in the world."
 
The Washington Post...
"The Nobodies Album is brisk and engaging...[it] succeeds in probing nuanced issues of guilt and innocence through an intricate collage of memories and musings..."
 
Redbook Magazine...
"The best-selling author of The Dogs of Babel returns with a fascinating, can't-put-it-down murder mystery."
 
Entertainment Weekly...
"[A] pinhole glimpse into the mind of a fascinating woman for whom life and fiction are stitched tightly together."
 
Booklist, starred review...
"As novelist Octavia Frost seeks to gain her son's forgiveness and the investigation into the murder of his girlfriend reveals surprising information, the narrative cuts away to excerpts of Octavia's new book, adding layers of emotional complexity to the story of their family life. In a stunning blend of craft and ingenuity, Carolyn Parkhurst (author of The Dogs of Babel) makes the excerpts far more than a mere metafictional exercise, for they prove to be as riveting and as dramatic as the main story line."
 
Publishers Weekly...

"Carolyn Parkhurst's voice sucks the reader in immediately--the gift of a real storyteller."
 

Digital Rights Information

OverDrive WMA Audiobook
Burn to CD: Not permitted
 
Transfer to device: Permitted (3 times)
   Transfer to Apple® device: Permitted
 
Public performance: Not permitted
File-sharing: Not permitted
Peer-to-peer usage: Not permitted
 
All copies of this title, including those transferred to portable devices and other media, must be deleted/destroyed at the end of the lending period.