A young man longing for personal connection poses as a missing woman's grief-stricken boyfriend in post--9/11 New York. Stoop-shouldered and balding beneath a porkpie hat, Jonah Soloway is an old man before his time. Estranged from his astrophysicist father and effectively orphaned when an SUV took his mother's life, Jonah longs to make a human connection--even if it means lying to get it. When he calls the phone number on Rose Oliveri's 9/11 missing poster and reaches her mother, Vivian, one lie gives birth to another and ...
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A young man longing for personal connection poses as a missing woman's grief-stricken boyfriend in post--9/11 New York. Stoop-shouldered and balding beneath a porkpie hat, Jonah Soloway is an old man before his time. Estranged from his astrophysicist father and effectively orphaned when an SUV took his mother's life, Jonah longs to make a human connection--even if it means lying to get it. When he calls the phone number on Rose Oliveri's 9/11 missing poster and reaches her mother, Vivian, one lie gives birth to another and another, and before Jonah knows it, the truth becomes indiscernible even to him. Stalked by Rose's ghost and desperate to keep the Oliveris from uncovering his lie, Jonah finds himself adrift in a city he no longer recognizes and more alone than ever. Both a poetic journey into the heart of post-9/11 New York and a darkly comic commentary on how our culture copes with loss, The Nostalgist is a striking debut novel from a masterful new author.
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Add this copy of The Nostalgist to cart. $4.95, new condition, Sold by Pennywise Books rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from London, OH, UNITED STATES, published 2012 by MP Publishing.
Add this copy of The Nostalgist to cart. $53.31, new condition, Sold by Just one more Chapter, ships from Miramar, FL, UNITED STATES, published 2012 by MP Publishing.
Add this copy of The Nostalgist to cart. $54.17, new condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Newport Coast, CA, UNITED STATES, published 2012 by MP Publishing.
I have great respect for Griffin Hansbury's writing in general, but his main character in the Nostalgist is just too weird for me, obsessed by his fictional construction of the dead girl. I had to stop reading it.