The Fabulist by Stephen Glass

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: May 2003
  • 352pp
  • Sales Rank: 163,698
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2003
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 352pp
    • Sales Rank: 163,698

    Synopsis

    A NOVEL OF AN IGNOMINIOUS FALL, THE

    RISE TO INFAMY, AND LIFE AFTER BOTH.

    It is the summer of 1998, and Stephen Glass is a young magazine journalist whose work is gaining more and more acclaim — until a rival magazine tells Glass's editor that it suspects one of his stories is fabricated. As his editor sorts out the truth, Glass is busy inventing it — spinning rich and complex blends of fact and fiction, and exploiting the gray world in between.

    But Glass is caught. His fabulism is uncovered and his career instantly unravels. Worse, his editor learns that it's not the first time. Soon, a long history of invention, passed off as journalism, emerges.

    Glass suddenly becomes a household name — an emblem of hubris and a flashpoint for Americans' distrust and dislike of the press. The media is consumed with the story: Once the young man who had been known for mastering the "takedown" article, Glass now becomes the one every journalist wants to take even further down. Once the hunter, Glass becomes the hunted — the story of the year.

    Glass responds to this agonizing public scrutiny with a self-imposed exile, first near Chicago with his family and then in the anonymous suburbs of Washington, D.C. There, he begins a long personal struggle with his misdeeds, working out his own answers to the questions of why he fabricated, how he can learn to stop lying, and whether, at age twenty-five, he has destroyed his life irrevocably.

    Glass encounters a world far stranger than his own fabrications — one populated by eccentric coworkers, ailing animals, angry masseuses, sexy librarians, competitive bingo players,synchronized swimmers, a soulful stripper, and a mysterious guardian angel who dresses only in purple. Meanwhile, Glass is chased by marauding journalists whose desperation and ruthlessness manage to match even his own.

    As he dodges his pursuers, Glass grasps at straws only to find that, wondrously, they sometimes hold. Despite himself, he rediscovers the Judaism he'd left far behind in Hebrew school, and falls helplessly in love with a young woman who turns out to have her own shameful past.

    In the end, The Fabulist is as much about family, friendship, religion, and love — about getting through somehow, even when it seems impossible — as it is about reality and fantasy. At once hilarious and harrowing, The Fabulist is one of the year's most provocative novels.


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    Biography

    Formerly a journalist, Stephen Glass is currently at work on his second novel.

    Customer Reviews

    Fabulistby Anonymous

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    May 07, 2008: I saw the movie 'Shattered Glass' without knowing anything about the story, and loved it. When I heard Stephen Glass had written a novel, I bought it right away and couldn't put it down. Glass does not make excuses for what he did, and is not looking for sympathy. He is just answering the question of WHY he did it- whch is what people wanted to know. Glass is an amazing writer and i look forward to his second novel.

    Fabulistby Anonymous

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    February 05, 2007: It amazes me that someone who has admittedly lied and fabricated dozens of writing pieces for his own fame and has yet to humble himself in apology is being taken seriously by so many people. Reviewers say 'It's only fiction.' Yeah, and it's only coincidence that the protagonist has the same name as the writer. It is clearly an exaggerated autobiography of his fall from grace. Stephen Glass is using his transgressions to benefit himself. Not only is he making money but he is winning people over to his side. But he is still a liar and a cheater. Yes, his story is fascinating, and yes, I have spent hours pouring over information about Stephen Glass. But it stops here. He should no longer benefit from his wrongdoings. When his actions show he is a 'changed man', THEN support him. But not before he has re-earned the public's trust.


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