Time's Arrow
Books | Fiction / Literary
3.6
Martin Amis
In this icy, knife’s-edge story of a life that progresses backward through time, unfolding into one of the darkest episodes of the 20th century, Amis (“at his intriguing, heedful, and powerful best” —Time Out), finds a chillingly original approach to the Holocaust in fiction • From the acclaimed author of Zone of Interest"The narrative moves with irresistible momentum.... [Amis is] a daring, exacting writer willing to defy the odds in pursuit of his art." —Newsday Tod. T. Friendly is living his life in reverse. Doctor Friendly has just died, but he moves “out of blackest sleep” to find himself surrounded by doctors and on the deathbed of a man in whose body he is imprisoned. After weeks of improving in the hospital, he is sent home to his affable, melting-pot, primary-colors existence in suburban America.As Friendly breaks up with his lovers in a prelude to seducing them and mangles his patients before he sends them home, his life races backward toward the one appalling moment in modern history when such reversals make sense. From the fresh-cut lawns of his retirement to the hustle of New York, and then back to the boat which reverses his course to the war-torn Europe Friendly came from, Amis brings the steeliest nerve to the job of realizing the novel’s inevitable logic. Trapped in his body from grave to cradle, Friendly’s consciousness can only watch as he struggles to make sense of the good doctor’s most ambitious project yet—the final solution.
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More Details:
Author
Martin Amis
Pages
176
Publisher
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Published Date
2011-04-06
ISBN
0307777774 9780307777775
Community ReviewsSee all
"A creepy, yet ultimately moving version of the Benjamin Buttons premise; a life lived backwards. An unnamed entity narrates its experiences sharing the body and life of one Todd Friendly, an elderly man with many dark secrets. Friendly's true identity becomes horrifically apparent as he "youthens" into active adulthood in Nazi era Germany, but the foreshadowing of his destiny provides many sinister clues. Less gimmicky than it sounds, a profound look at mortality and banal evil."
"Could not finish this one"
R T
Rebekah Travis