Mortals by Norman Rush

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(Hardcover - First Edition)

  • Pub. Date: May 2003
  • 715pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2003
    • Publisher: Knopf Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 715pp

    Synopsis

    “An astounding accomplishment. . . . [A] detonation of talent that threatens to incinerate competitors for miles around.” —The Christian Science Monitor

    About this guide
    The introduction, discussion questions, suggested reading list, and author biography that follow are designed to enhance your group’s reading of Norman Rush’s Mortals. We hope they will provide useful ways of thinking and talking about this greatly anticipated novel by the author of Mating, which won the National Book Award in 1991.

    Time

    12 years [after his first novel Mating], we have the remarkable Mortals, which gives us the late-blooming Rush as challenging and surprising and uncompromising as ever.—Lev Grossman

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    Biography

    Norman Rush was raised in Oakland, California, and graduated from Swarthmore College in 1956. He has been an antiquarian book dealer and a college instructor, and, with his wife, Elsa, he lived and worked in Africa from 1978 to 1983.

    His stories, essays and reviews have been published in the New Yorker, the New York Times Book Review, The New York Review of Books, The Nation, and other periodicals. He has been the recipient of numerous awards, including an NEA grant, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship.

    Whites, a collection of stories, was published in 1986 and nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, and his first novel, Mating, was published in 1991 and was the recipient of the National Book Award. Mortals is his second novel.

    Customer Reviews

    Mortalsby Anonymous

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    June 11, 2004: After consuming far too much book club junk food, I found Mortals to be a nourishing feast. It affected me profoundly, especially with regards to the soul-touching theme of literature itself--if and how words matter at all in our daily existence. Another major theme was obedience and rebellion (which has inspired me to start reading Milton's Paradise Lost --what I think was the inspiration for this novel), the depths of which are fascinating. A third stiking (yet sidebar) theme is Morel's opinion on the institution 'religion'--let it tease you into putting yourself into a fresh perspective of your own. As for the language of this book, it can touch you with its poetry then make you laugh out loud--sometimes all in the same sentence. It is truly eloquent. Putting a description of this novel into a nutshell such as this is simply ridiculous. Please do it justice--read it, and let it sink in....

    Mortalsby Anonymous

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    November 03, 2003: It takes place in Botswana, Africa, as everyone knows. The 'hero' is a spy for the CIA. His life is in crisis. I loved being in his mind, even though it is often tortured. I loved the writing itself, which is often like poetry, except very unromantic. But I guess the hero, Ray, is romantic about his wife. He loves her more than anything on earth and needs her for his life not to be meaningless to him. Her name is Iris, and she's a sweet person who loves him too, but she goes to a therapist, Dr. Morel, a Black American, and she and he fall in love. Ray wants to kill him, but ends up being in an ironical position where his priority has to be to save Dr. Morel's life when they are captured in a political situation and held together in cell -- where Ray finds out a secret about Iris and Dr. Morel that Iris has been keeping from him. There is a strange, surreal yet very real, battle on the roof of an old hotel. One thing strange about this bloody battle is that it is so disturbing and violent and extreme, and yet it's funny, too. This can't be explained. Except that genius can do anything, even make you simultaneously weep, feel fear, and laugh. I won't tell the ending. There is a sexual scene with Ray and Iris toward the end that is so vivid and perfect that it brought tears to my eyes. Read this book. Then read it again. It is a brilliant work of art, a beautiful work, a masterpiece.


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