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Delphi

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Brought to you by Penguin.
'I am sick of the future. Up to here with the future. I don't want anything to do with it; don't want it near me.'
This is a story about now.
It's a story about a woman, and the family she has made for herself. It's about the dramas unfolding on our screens and behind the curtains of our homes in a world more turbulent than any of us could have imagined.
But it's also about before. And what comes next. It's about the flames that have burned for centuries beneath the cracks that are opening now. About the Ancient Greeks, who sacrificed and bargained with their Gods; about prophets and oracles, tarot cards and tea leaves, and how time and certainty and, sometimes, those we love can slip away.
It's about the questions we have always asked as we scroll and click and rage against our fates - and the answers that are coming for us whether we like them or not.
Extraordinary, electrifying, irreverent and heartbreaking, Delphi is a mesmerising story of our pasts, our presents and our futures, and how we keep on living in a world that is ever-more uncertain and absurd.
'Sexy, dark and dangerous, disturbed and disturbing in equal measure - I loved it' Anna Hope, author of Expectation
© Clare Pollard 2022 (P) Penguin Audio 2022

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 15, 2022
      Poet Pollard (The Heavy-Petting Zoo) follows an unnamed professor and mother’s adjustment to the Covid-19 lockdown in her richly layered debut novel. The narrator’s interior monologue alternates between racing panic and numbed tedium as she juggles a classics course, a translation project, and research on divination methods for her next book. As her 10-year-old son, Xander, deals with depression, and the two become increasingly isolated, she calls upon German words to define her state of mind. The novel is separated into short chapters, each named after a form of prophecy she’s been researching, which she connects to her attempts to cope with the new normal (in “Tarotmancy: Prophecy by Tarot,” she counts Xander among her mixed blessings while drawing a tarot card from a deck). In some chapters, the narrator meditates monotonously for several pages on what happens during a single hour; in others, she rushes through a matter of months in a few paragraphs. The uneven pacing creates discomfort, which seems to be the point; though Pollard’s fractured narrative is difficult to get through at times, it effectively conveys the first year of the pandemic. It’s low-key compared to other recent pandemic fiction, but the main character’s frustration and fear is sure to strike a chord.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Pollard's debut novel is set in contemporary London during the Covid pandemic. Emma Lowndes brings the unnamed narrator, a classics scholar, to life as she tries to balance the needs of her husband and 10-year-old son with her own needs. She is studying ancient prophecies and attempting to predict the future. In a detached academic voice, Lowndes defines 65 ancient methods of prophecy while interweaving Greek mythology, the surreal aspects of isolation during lockdown, and the impact of other global events. Listeners hear the scholar's resentment and her husband's defensiveness as he shirks parenting responsibilities. Rae, the tarot reader, sounds young as she pronounces her vague observations with an inflection that turns them into questions. Many listeners will identify with the protagonist's stream-of-consciousness reflections on our lives during Covid. N.E.M. © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine

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Languages

  • English

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