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My Revolutions

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
It's the day before Mike Frame's fiftieth birthday and his quiet provincial life is suddenly falling apart. But perhaps it doesn't matter, because it's not his life in the first place. He has a past that his partner Miranda and step-daughter Sam know nothing about. Now Mike is seeing ghosts – a dead ex-lover and an old friend who wants to reminisce. Mike can no longer ignore the contradiction between who he is and who he once was.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      1998. The Age of Radical Politics is over. The Age of Shopping has begun. Chris Carver, aka Michael Frame, is living the quiet suburban life when his revolutionary past comes back to haunt him. First, he glimpses a one-time lover he believes was killed thirty years earlier. Next, an encounter with an old acquaintance disquiets him. On the run again, he flashes back to life in the late '60s--the people, the protests, the riots, the bombings, and his youthful gullibility. Golden Voice Simon Prebble provides insights into na•veté and wisdom in Kunzru's outstanding exploration into the cyclical nature of idealism, revolution, betrayal, and change. Kunzru's lyrical clarity gives Prebble's artistry the chance to soar, his subtlety and finesse highlighting every vivid moment. Must listening. S.J.H. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 25, 2008
      Simon Prebble, a consummate professional among narrators, plays Kunzru's middle-aged protagonist, who relates his adolescent-into-adulthood journey that has gradually brought him to his current state of misery. From the outset Prebble helps structure the kind of suspense and tension Kunzru created so superbly in The Impressionist
      . The story opens at Christopher's 50th birthday party. But he is no longer Christopher; “Michael Frame” now leads a yuppie suburban family life he describes meticulously and with witty, bitter irony. He exists in a sort of “mental crouch,” waiting, knowing that “even now, in days, or even hours, my life here will be over.” Initiated as a 1960s teen into a counterculture, anti-Vietnam, anti-imperialist commune, he falls for the gutsy, freewheeling Anna. Wanting to win her, he ends up blowing up bathrooms and buildings. But he is forever dogged by a creepy childhood acquaintance named Miles, who, in the end, blackmails him into working for the people he always bitterly opposed. Kunzru's descriptions of places and events are sometimes too long and Christopher's lifetime attachment to Anna is a bit hard to swallow. But Kunzru delivers a gripping tale. Simultaneous release with the Dutton hardcover.

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  • English

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