Amateur
Barbarians
by Robert Cohen
Published by Scribner
July 2009
$27.00US
ISBN-13: 978-0743230360
ISBN-10: 0743230361 |
"How can a book about life's
most serious questions contain so many big laughs? Only a writer
of Cohen's wit and intelligence could have pulled it off. He
writes with the acuity of a psychoanalyst and the compassion of a
saint. His superb prose style is as good as it gets."
--Sigrid Nunez, author of The Last of Her Kind
"If there's one thing that Robert Cohen's protagonists are good
at, it's running in place. His characters trail around a long list
of aggrievements, especially when it comes to themselves, and are
continually affecting in the comic resourcefulness of their
dyspepsia and pessimism. What's most moving about them, though, is
the extent to which, as they try to figure out just how this
maturity business operates, they perform the act of faith of
behaving like better people in the hope that at some point that
behavior might become the truth. Amateur Barbarians is hilarious
and wise and may be his best work yet."
--Jim Shepard, author of Like You'd Understand, Anyway
"Robert Cohen's satirical eye is sharper than ever -- who else
could have captured so perfectly the struggles of middle age? A
very funny and very smart novel."
--Andrea Barrett, author of The Air We Breathe and Ship
Fever
Teddy Hastings is more of a doer
than a thinker, a man who measures his life by what he has built:
a successful career as a middle school principal, a solid
marriage, two lovely if distant daughters. But once he hits fifty,
in the shadow of his younger brother's death and a health scare of
his own, Teddy feels the gravitational pull of his mortality and
realizes he is no longer quite so in the middle, no longer
building a life but maintaining one. He yearns for delivery and
transcendence, for a hint of the sublime, and is determined to
find it. What he gets instead is the "intrusion of the irrational
in his affairs."
Oren Pierce, a perpetual grad student who has "made a mark, or
left a smudge anyway" all over the place, has had more than enough
transcendence in his life. Neither the extraordinary existence for
which he assumed he was destined nor the woman with whom he
assumed he would share it has materialized. In their absence he
flounders in the possible, wondering what it will take to anchor
himself to the supremely ordinary existence he both longs for and
abhors.
The intersecting and diverging paths of these two men take them
from the grids of New York City to the domesticated gardens of New
England to the wildest, most unstructured landscapes of all -- the
bedroom, the classroom, the darkroom, and the far reaches of East
Africa, where Teddy at last finds something akin to what he seeks.
Amateur Barbarians showcases a writer at the peak of his
powers, laying bare the evasions and unrealities of the familiar,
the odd recognition with which we view the remote, plumbing the
depths of the unlived life with uncanny wit and perception,
revealing yet again why Robert Cohen was touted by The New York
Times Book Review as the "heir to Saul Bellow and Philip
Roth."
About the Author
Robert Cohen is the author of three previous novels, The
Organ Builder, The Here and Now, and Inspired Sleep,
and a collection of short stories. Winner of a Lila Acheson
Wallace - Reader's Digest Writers Award, the Ribalow Prize, The
Pushcart Prize, and a Whiting Award, he has published short
fiction in a variety of publications -- including Harpers, GQ,
The Paris Review and Ploughshares. He has taught at the
Iowa Writers Workshop, Harvard University, and Middlebury College.
He lives in Vermont.
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