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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN num: 9781400031665
ISBN number: 1400031664
Label: Vintage
Manufacturer: Vintage
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 416
Printing Date: February 12, 2008
Publishing house: Vintage
Release Date: February 12, 2008
Sale Popularity Level: 3866
Studio: Vintage
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Product Description:
When Laurel Estabrook is attacked while riding her bicycle through Vermont’s back roads, her life is forever changed. Formerly outgoing, Laurel withdraws into her photography, spending all her free time at a homeless shelter. There she meets Bobbie Crocker, a man with a history of mental illness and a box of photographs that he won’t let anyone see. When Bobbie dies, Laurel discovers a deeply hidden secret–a story that leads her far from her old life, and into a cat-and-mouse game with pursuers who claim they want to save her.
In a tale that travels between the Roaring Twenties and the twenty-first century, between Jay Gatsby’s Long Island and rural New England, bestselling author Chris Bohjalian has written his most extraordinary novel yet.
Amazon.com:
Best known for the provocative and powerful novel, Midwives (an Oprah Book Club® Selection), Chris Bohjalian writes beautiful and riveting fiction featuring what the San Francisco Chronicle dubbed 'ordinary people in heartbreaking circumstances behaving with grace and dignity.' In his new novel, The Double Bind, a literary thriller with references to (and including characters from) The Great Gatsby, Bohjalian takes readers on a haunting journey through one woman's obsession with uncovering a dark secret. We think Bohjalian fans will be thrilled with this compelling and unforgettable read, but just to be sure, we asked bestselling author Jodi Picoult to read The Double Bind and give us her take. Check out her review below. --Daphne Durham
Guest Reviewer: Jodi Picoult
From the provocative and gut-wrenching The Pact, to the brilliant genre-bending The Tenth Circle, to her latest novel about a high school shooting Nineteen Minutes, Jodi Picoult's riveting novels center on family and relationships, and bring to light questions and issues that remain with a reader long after the last page is turned.
I once heard a fellow novelist call writing 'successful schizophrenia'--we invent people and worlds that don't exist; but instead of being medicated, we are paid for it. Although countless novels succeed in whisking the reader away on the heels of such fabrications, there are very few that pull the curtain away from the craft, allowing us inside the mind of a working novelist as he combines reality and fantasy. Chris Bohjalian's The Double Bind is not just one of these; it's the finest example I've ever read of a book that tips its hat to both the beauty of the literary creation, as well as the magical act of creating.
Fact and fiction become indistinguishable in The Double Bind: The story centers on Laurel Estabrook, a young social worker and survivor of a near-rape, who stumbles across photographs taken by a formerly homeless client and tries to understand how a man who'd taken snapshots of celebrities in the 50s and 60s might have wound up on the streets. However, an author's note tells us that Bohjalian conceived this book after being shown a batch of old photographs taken by a once-homeless man; and the actual photos of Bob 'Soupy' Campbell are peppered throughout the text. In another neat twist, Bohjalian's resurrects details from The Great Gatsby, which become 'real' in the context of his own novel--Laurel lives in West Egg; part of her hunt for her photographer's past involves meeting with the descendants of Daisy and Tom Buchanan.
As a writer who counts The Great Gatsby as one of the books that changed her life, this inclusion was both startling and remarkable for me. Who doesn't want one's favorite characters to come to life--even if it's only within the constraints of another fictional work? But Bohjalian chose his text wisely: no discusion of The Great Gatsby is complete without alluding to missed opportunities and unreliable sources--critical elements in Laurel's quest. And therein lies Bohjalian's true double bind: all stories--even the ones we tell ourselves--are subject to our own interpretation, and to the degree we can make others believe them.
The Double Bind may flirt with the classics, but it's not your father's stuffy old tome: it's the sort of book you want to read in one sitting, and it packs a twist at the end that will leave you speechless. It also, worthily, spotlights the cause of homelessness in a way that isn't preachy, but honest and explanatory. Ultimately, what Bohjalian's done is offer his lucky readers another reminder of why he's such an extraordinary author: by creating characters that become so real we lose the distinction between truth and embellishment; by reminding us that the story of any life--whether fictional, functional, or marginal--is one to be savored. --Jodi Picoult
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Rated by buyers
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I do not know what I was expecting when I decided to purchase this book. I think maybe some interesting, non-standard chick-lit, altho the synopsis suggested a bit more of an adventure lurking within. Whatever compelled me, it did not disappoint. As a matter of fact, it exceeded my highest expectations.
Bohjalian is my new hero. He weaves a story the way only I can fantasize of putting one together - so well thought out, so explicitly planned. A definite challenge, for writer and reader both. Without being gritty, without being sinister, strictly using the mind alone, the reader embarks on a compelling journey of thought and deduction. The creativity is masterful, the dialog engaging, the manuevering impecible. I am floored! This story truly "had me at hello." From page 1 I was drawn in, suckered along just like Laurel (the main character). I was her biggest cheerleader, riding along side of her as she spiraled thru the tangled web of thoughts, ideas, compulsions that surrounded her mystery. I think, in the end, I actual was Laurel, as the dawn of light slowly spread thru my mind, along with hers, as I realized just what, exactly, had been going on...
This is the sort of book that does not leave after the last page is read. It lingers. It evokes new thoughts, new realizations, new ponderances. I have enjoyed this story more after I read it then I did while I read it. Which says a lot because it was 100% completely engaging while I read it.
It's a keeper and has a permanent spot on my bookshelf.
Rated by buyers
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I have read some really good books lately that I would recommend to people but none so much as The Double Bind, a novel by the man responsible for such bestsellers as Midwives and Before You Know Kindness. The Double Bind tells the tale of Laurel Estabrook and her survival and subsequent psychological trauma from an attempted rape in the sleepy town of Underhill, Vermont. A social worker for a homeless shelter called BEDS, Laurel focuses on her humanitarian efforts in order to forget the recurring nightmares of the assault. When a man named Bobbie Crocker who lived at the shelter dies, Laurel is given a project by her boss Katherine - restore some remarkable old photographs of Bobbie's and curate a show as a fundraiser for the shelter. Laurel's passion for photography has her delving deeper into the photos than she ever imagined, images of famous musicians, film stars and the legendary Jay Gatsby and the Buchanan family arousing her deepest curiosities. Believing Bobbie is the son of well-known socialites Tom and Daisy Buchanan, Laurel's sleuthing goes from mild inquisitiveness to full-blown obsession, alarming her friends and family. What she uncovers towards the end of her seemingly self-indulgent investigation will hit the reader like a ton of bricks, Bohjalian's purposeful and juicy twist on the plot making The Double Bind one of the most distinguished novels in American literature.
Bohjalian's writing is graceful, intelligent and engaging, pulling the reader in with eloquent prose and superb storytelling and keeping them hooked from beginning to end. He has crafted yet another intriguing tale, one that definitively captures the avid reader's interest with characters so thoroughly constructed that they are nearly made of flesh. He perseveres with his proclivity to bring minutiae to the forefront and though these details may seem inconsequential to some, it tickles me as a writer to see another writer bring the smaller things into the bigger picture, enhancing the mental perspective. Call it bringing HD to a standard transmission. Some lovely examples of this are his physical descriptions of people, such as a character named Reese:
"Reese was a heavyset man with wild eyebrows and wavy white hair, and a chin that slid without interruption into a neck the size of a log. He was wearing tinted eyeglasses and a crewneck sweater with an Oxford button-down shirt, and he was grinning at the camera in a manner that could only be called rakish." (pg. 178-179)
It even extends to delightful trivialities such as this:
"The woman nodded, and then rested a finger - the nail a near-perfect oval, the white at the tip a crisp sickle moon - on her chin." (pg. 247)
Bohjalian's original inspiration for his story came from a box of old photographs taken by real-life photographer Bob "Soupy" Campbell, a transient who died in a studio apartment and whose photos were provided to Bohjalian by Committee on Temporary Shelter in Burlington, Vermont. Campbell's photographs are prominently featured throughout the novel and Bohjalian even offers a website on which to view more of Campbell's exceptional work.
Bottom line: The Double Bind is a rapturous read to the last word and no doubt one of the best novels of 2007. I am fairly certain that his most recent novel (Skeletons At The Feast, which I have yet to read) either equals or transcends this magnificent piece of literary genius.
Rated by buyers
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I had a really hard time "getting into" this book. I must have started it 4 times before I finished it. I wouldn't have stayed with it, tho, if it had not been a local bookclub choice.
Rated by buyers
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A good read even though about half way thru the twist starts to become apparent if you're paying attention.
Rated by buyers
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The author thinks "journal" is a verb and that everyone has a therapist. In his subsequent life, if reincarnation does occur, he will be born female and will be much happier. Cheap effort to ride on The Great Gatsby's coattails does not achieve liftoff. Also O. Henry endings have been out of style for a hundred years or so - for a reason. Avoid.
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