The King's Book Club

This is The King of Zanesville's Book Club. I'm presenting a book to you daily that you might not be aware of. Some you will be interested in, while others you won't.

Friday, September 01, 2006

The Emperor's Children By Claire Messud



From Publishers Weekly
Marina Thwaite, Danielle Minkoff and Julian Clarke were buddies at Brown, certain that they would soon do something important in the world. But as all near 30, Danielle is struggling as a TV documentary maker, and Julius is barely surviving financially as a freelance critic. Marina, the startlingly beautiful daughter of celebrated social activist, journalist and hob-nobber Murray Thwaite, is living with her parents on the Upper West Side, unable to finish her book"titled The Emperor's Children Have No Clothes (on how changing fashions in children's clothes mirror changes in society). Two arrivals upset the group stasis: Ludovic, a fiercely ambitious Aussie who woos Marina to gain entrée into society (meanwhile planning to destroy Murray's reputation), and Murray's nephew, Frederick "Bootie" Tubb, an immature, idealistic college dropout and autodidact who is determined to live the life of a New York intellectual. The group orbits around the post"September 11 city with disconcerting entitlement"and around Murray, who is, in a sense, the emperor. Messud, in her fourth novel, remains wickedly observant of pretensions"intellectual, sexual, class and gender. Her writing is so fluid, and her plot so cleverly constructed, that events seem inevitable, yet the narrative is ultimately surprising and masterful as a contemporary comedy of manners. 100,00 announced first printing; author tour.(Sept. 4)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Known for her acuity in examining life's profound issues through intellectually probing and nuanced prose, Messud now evinces a higher level of sophistication in this darkly symbolic and overtly satiric examination of the culturally enclosed world of today's East Coast media cognoscenti. At its core is celebrated liberal journalist Murray Thwaite, an outspoken pundit used to his fair share of public adulation and abjuration. Reverence and revilement, however, are now coming from sources much closer to home. His adored and adoring 30-year-old daughter, Marina, and her best friend, Danielle, an independent TV producer, may be firmly in Murray's camp, but they are outflanked by Ludovic Seeley, an Australian magazine publisher soon to be Murray's son-in-law, and Bootie Tubb, Murray's callow, idealistic 19-year-old nephew--two men intent on exposing Murray's personal and professional hypocrisies. Ambitious and egocentric, naive yet urbane, Murray and his circle behave with a tenuous frivolity born of their exalted sense of self-worth. Comparisons to Zadie Smith's On Beauty (2005) are inevitable, yet Messud's courageous exploration of this societal microcosm is less ardent and more artful. Tangy dialogue, provocative asides, glittering imagery, and nimble postulations build toward an electrifying and edifying conclusion. Carol Haggas
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

About the Author
Claire Messud’s first novel, When the World Was Steady, and her book of novellas, The Hunters, were finalists for the PEN/Faulkner Award; her second novel, The Last Life, was a Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year and an Editor’s Choice at The Village Voice. All three books were New York Times Notable Books of the Year. She has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship and a Radcliffe Fellowship, and is the current recipient of the Strauss Living Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She lives in Somerville, Massachusetts, with her husband and children.

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