book cover of The Miserables
 

The Miserables

(1993)
A novel by

 
 
Brett Healey is thirty years old and looking for clues. Traveling to and from Wellington, New Zealand, for his grandfather's funeral, he reflects on his past, finding patterns as he meets again the people who have meant most to him. Healey's high-speed, shoddy overheated mind detects clues to the present in an evocative return to his childhood and adolescence. In three days enough evidence is sifted to open up a new passage in his life. He gains, among other things, an appreciation for his "odd" beekeeping brother who, after all, "labored beautifully"; a recognition of his own capacity for articulate tenderness, as opposed to tongue-tied observation and judgment; a new sensation of calm, brought on by recalling his grandfather's communal spirit at the racetrack; a way of ranking the place his chosen profession plays in his identity; and a revived response to the beauty and familiarity of his birthplace. He could only make his peace by attempting to join together the landscapes framed in his parents' windows by rushing from room to room, much as a child runs through a quiet house early in the morning, upset that he is the only one awake. Absorbing, beautifully written, and often very funny, The Miserables introduces American readers to a young writer of uncommon distinction and authority.


Genre: Literary Fiction

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