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Everyman Cover Image CD Audiobook CD Audiobook

Everyman

Roth, Philip (Author). Guidall, George. (Narrator).

Record details

  • ISBN: 1419389017
  • Physical Description: 4 sound discs (4 hr., 15 min.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in.
    sound disc
    sound recording
  • Edition: Unabridged ed.
  • Publisher: Prince Frederick, Md. : Recorded Books, p2006.

Content descriptions

General Note:
In container (17 cm.).
Participant or Performer Note: Narrated by George Guidall.
Summary, etc.: The hero of Everyman is obsessed with mortality. As he reminds himself at one point, "I'm thirty-four! Worry about oblivion when you're seventy-five." But he cannot help himself. He is the ex-husband in three marriages gone wrong. He is the father of two sons who detest him, despite a daughter who adores him. And as his health worsens, he is the envious brother of a much fitter man.
Additional Physical Form available Note:
Issued also on cassette.
Subject: Middle-aged persons Fiction
Genre: Audiobooks.
Domestic fiction.

Available copies

  • 12 of 12 copies available at Bibliomation. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Kent Memorial Library - Suffield.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 12 total copies.
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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Kent Memorial Library - Suffield CDA ROTH (Text) 32518129840040 Adult Book on CD Available -

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Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 1419389017
Everyman
Everyman
by Roth, Philip; Guidall, George (Narrated by)
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Publishers Weekly Review

Everyman

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

What is it about Philip Roth? He has published 27 books, almost all of which deal with the same topics-Jewishness, Americanness, sex, aging, family-and yet each is simultaneously familiar and new. His latest novel is a slim but dense volume about a sickly boy who grows up obsessed with his and everybody else's health, and eventually dies in his 70s, just as he always said he would. (I'm not giving anything away here; the story begins with the hero's funeral.) It might remind you of the old joke about the hypochondriac who ordered his tombstone to read: "I told you I was sick." And yet, despite its coy title, the book is both universal and very, very specific, and Roth watchers will not be able to stop themselves from comparing the hero to Roth himself. (In most of his books, whether written in the third person or the first, a main character is a tortured Jewish guy from Newark-like Roth.) The unnamed hero here is a thrice-married adman, a father and a philanderer, a 70-something who spends his last days lamenting his lost prowess (physical and sexual), envying his healthy and beloved older brother, and refusing to apologize for his many years of bad behavior, although he palpably regrets them. Surely some wiseacre critic will note that he is Portnoy all grown up, an amalgamation of all the womanizing, sex- and death-obsessed characters Roth has written about (and been?) throughout his career. But to obsess about the parallels between author and character is to miss the point: like all of Roth's works, even the lesser ones, this is an artful yet surprisingly readable treatise on... well, on being human and struggling and aging at the beginning of the new century. It also borrows devices from his previous works-there's a sequence about a gravedigger that's reminiscent of the glove-making passages in American Pastoral, and many observations will remind careful readers of both Patrimony and The Dying Animal-and through it all, there's that Rothian voice: pained, angry, arrogant and deeply, wryly funny. Nothing escapes him, not even his own self-seriousness. "Amateurs look for inspiration; the rest of us just get up and go to work," he has his adman-turned-art-teacher opine about an annoying student. Obviously, Roth himself is a professional. (May 5) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 1419389017
Everyman
Everyman
by Roth, Philip; Guidall, George (Narrated by)
Rate this title:
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Kirkus Review

Everyman

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Roth follows his recent succession of critically acclaimed novels (e.g., American Pastoral, 1997; The Plot Against America, 2004) with a compact meditation on mortality, which partially echoes his 1991 memoir-novel Patrimony. Inspired by the medieval English allegorical drama whose title it shares, it's the story of an erring, death-haunted representative man (never named). It begins as his departed spirit observes his own funeral, then weaves backward and forward throughout his past life, envisioned as inevitable progression from virile youth through morally compromised adulthood and middle age, into "his sixties when his health began giving way and his body seemed threatened all the time," and beyond--into the beyond. This Everyman grows up in Elizabeth, N.J., the son of a benevolent and prosperous jeweler, further blessed by a doting mother and a tirelessly kind and supportive "perfect" older brother. He enjoys a successful career as an advertising agency's art director, but fails at marriage (losing three wives, as he pursues countless other women), and is almost as disastrous a parent, suffering permanent estrangement from the two sons of his first marriage, but achieving a sustaining relationship with daughter (from his second marriage) Nancy, whose patient filial devotion interestingly parallels that of the medieval Everyman's character Good Deeds, who accompanies the title character into the realm of Death. This risky novel is significantly marred by redundancy and discursiveness (especially by a surfeit of rhetorical questions), but energized by vivid writing, palpable emotional intensity and several wrenching scenes--for example, encounters in the painting class that he (an amateur artist) organizes for other seniors at his retirement village; a blistering exchange with second wife Phoebe, long aware of his womanizing; a wonderful conversation with a black gravedigger at the cemetery where his parents are buried, where he'll soon be buried. A rich exploration of the epiphany that awaits us all--that "life's most disturbing intensity is death." Copyright ƂĀ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 1419389017
Everyman
Everyman
by Roth, Philip; Guidall, George (Narrated by)
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BookList Review

Everyman

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

Does Roth's new novel top or even match the stunning accomplishment of his previous one, the best-selling and award-winning The Plot against America0 (2004)? It is shorter in length and narrower in scope. It is the portrait of an ordinary man--he novel's title is apt--who accomplishes nothing extraordinary. Strict chronology is set aside as various episodes from the past and the present jostle for center stage. The motif of death followed this man throughout his life, beginning in boyhood, and with the advent of middle age, the frailty of the flesh, in both sexual and physical terms, is increasingly apparent to him. Despite its shortness in length and relative narrowness in scope, this novel speaks eloquently about life's un0 fulfillments, about making adjustments if the unfolding of one's life doesn't follow the original plan. Roth continues exercising his career-defining, clear-eyed, intelligent vision of how the psychology of families works. In The Plot against America0 , we saw how a family reacts to external forces; here, the reaction is to a family's internal circumstances. Perhaps, then, more readers will find this lean, poig-nant novel more relevant to themselves. --Brad Hooper Copyright 2006 Booklist

Syndetic Solutions - Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 1419389017
Everyman
Everyman
by Roth, Philip; Guidall, George (Narrated by)
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Library Journal Review

Everyman

Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

His sons hostile, his marriages all failed, and his body slowing down, Roth's new protagonist finds as he stumbles into middle age that he doesn't much like the man he has become. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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