The Guest Lecture

The Guest Lecture

Taschenbuch
5.01

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Beschreibung

With “a voice as clear, sincere, and wry as any I’ve read in current American fiction” (Joshua Cohen), Martin Riker’s poignant and startlingly original novel asks how to foster a brave mind in anxious times, following a newly jobless academic rehearsing a speech on John Maynard Keynes for a surprising audience
In a hotel room in the middle of the night, Abby, a young feminist economist, lies awake next to her sleeping husband and daughter. Anxious that she is grossly underprepared for a talk she is presenting tomorrow on optimism and John Maynard Keynes, she has resolved to practice by using an ancient rhetorical method of assigning parts of her speech to different rooms in her house and has brought along a comforting albeit imaginary companion to keep her on track—Keynes himself.
Yet as she wanders with increasing alarm through the rooms of her own consciousness, Abby finds herself straying from her prepared remarks on economic history, utopia, and Keynes’s pragmatic optimism. A lapsed optimist herself, she has been struggling under the burden of supporting a family in an increasingly hostile America after being denied tenure at the university where she teaches. Confronting her own future at a time of global darkness, Abby undertakes a quest through her memories to ideas hidden in the corners of her mind—a piecemeal intellectual history from Cicero to Lewis Carroll to Queen Latifah—as she asks what a better world would look like if we told our stories with more honest and more hopeful imaginations.
With warm intellect, playful curiosity, and an infectious voice, Martin Riker acutely animates the novel of ideas with a beating heart and turns one woman’s midnight crisis into the performance of a lifetime.
Haupt-Genre
N/A
Sub-Genre
N/A
Format
Taschenbuch
Seitenzahl
256
Preis
13.99 €

Beiträge

1
Alle
5

Abby can't sleep. She is lying awake in a hotel room, next to her daughter and husband, fretting about a guest lecture she has to hold tomorrow and that she just did not prepare. In an attempt to apply an ancient memorization technique, she walks through her family's home in her mind, attaching one topic of her talk to every room she is in. On that journey, she is joined by the (imaginary) legendary economist Keynes himself, both the topic of her talk and a powerful counterbalance to her increasingly spiraling mind. Together, they try to make the guest lecture work - and to make sense of Abby's unease, her dissatisfaction, her past mistakes and crumbling career, her sense of self, her life. If you read "Keynes" and immediately thought "Ew, economics" please don't be put off. This is not a deep-dive into economic theory. "The Guest Lecture" is a tender and philosophical novel on what it means to be a woman in academia, how to deal with imposter syndrome, coming to terms with missed chances and living in a society that feels like it is diving headfirst into its own demise. It is thoughtful, dark, funny, hard-hitting and yet easy to read. As in: I read the 250 pages in one sitting and did not tire once. It is also a hopeful book. And we all need that, don't we. So do yourself a favor and read it. Five stars without question and a book I will forever cherish, reread, and keep close.

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