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Carregando... Afternoon of a Faunde James Lasdun
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Registre-se no LibraryThing tpara descobrir se gostará deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. The Past Comes Knocking An old female associate, Julia Gault, of moderately successful documentarian Marco Rosedale, down on her luck, writes a memoir in which in one short paragraph she recalls that Marco had nonconsensual sex with her. It occurred years ago, in 1975, when he was filming a story on The Troubles and she assisted. Both had had too much to drink and though at first she accepted his advances, in the final moments she said no. He did it anyway. They slept the night together and worked with each other several times after the incident. Marco learns he’s been accused of sexual assault only when a newspaper reporter contacts him for comment, before they publish an excerpt of the book. Though Julia treats the incident lightly, he reacts with anger, because he recognizes that it could harm his career and his relationship with his girlfriend and daughter. The narrator recounting all that transpires once Marco learns of the pending publication is a friend of Marco. As the story unfolds, the narrator becomes more involved in the story, even to the point where he calls on Julia to hear her side of the story. Unforeseen consequences result that shake the narrator and leave readers still with the quandary of whom to believe. The narrator leaves it to every reader to decide for themselves exactly what happened between Marco and Julia in the room in 1975. They both agree they had sex and even agree that up until a certain point it was consensual. But, as readers will discover, the story changes subtlety, and at one point quite dramatically when sadism enters the picture. Many readers, also, will find Marco a less than sympathetic character (for example, he refers to the exposure as his “ordeal”). Julia, too, has tendencies that readers will find less than desirable. Then there is the question of what passed for acceptable behavior in one time but no longer. In the end, all boils down to she said/he said with the facts as gathered by the narrator for us to make our decisions upon. As this review is written, the latest chapter in the Matt Lauer saga has broken, with him now accused of rape by an NBC News colleague while covering the 2014 Sochi Olympics. And, as in the book, Lauer and the public are learning of it from a book excerpt. Lasdun’s novel couldn’t be more timely. 4.5 A very erudite look at the MeToo movement - in a fictional context. The narrator is a college professor, writer, and a self-proclaimed sounding board for his friend Marco Rosedale who is currently accused of sexual assault 40 years ago by a woman the narrator also knows well. Julia Gault was a fellow journalist with Marco on an assignment in Belfast and while he claims the encounter was consensual, she claims it was rape. Because of the narrator's literal caught-in-the-middle position, we get a sense of the toll the accusation takes on everyone. It becomes a true battle with escalating ammo on both sides and the narration manages to stay somewhat detached to let us feel the effects and choose our own sides. "The onus of belief is on the believer" says the narrator somewhat glibly at the outset until he becomes more embroiled in the situation and finds himself on a quest for truth. Ironically timed in the lead-up months before the 2016 election, this book is an astute commentary on truth, memory, power, gender roles, and the increasing difficulty in remaining neutral in a charged environment. sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
Distinctions
When expat English journalist Marco Rosedale is accused of sexual assault in a former girlfriend's memoir, he confides in a close friend, who finds himself caught between loyalty to Marco and an urgent desire to uncover the truth. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — Carregando... GênerosClassificação decimal de Dewey (CDD)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos E.U.A. (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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An old female associate, Julia Gault, of moderately successful documentarian Marco Rosedale, down on her luck, writes a memoir in which in one short paragraph she recalls that Marco had nonconsensual sex with her. It occurred years ago, in 1975, when he was filming a story on The Troubles and she assisted. Both had had too much to drink and though at first she accepted his advances, in the final moments she said no. He did it anyway. They slept the night together and worked with each other several times after the incident. Marco learns he’s been accused of sexual assault only when a newspaper reporter contacts him for comment, before they publish an excerpt of the book. Though Julia treats the incident lightly, he reacts with anger, because he recognizes that it could harm his career and his relationship with his girlfriend and daughter. The narrator recounting all that transpires once Marco learns of the pending publication is a friend of Marco. As the story unfolds, the narrator becomes more involved in the story, even to the point where he calls on Julia to hear her side of the story. Unforeseen consequences result that shake the narrator and leave readers still with the quandary of whom to believe.
The narrator leaves it to every reader to decide for themselves exactly what happened between Marco and Julia in the room in 1975. They both agree they had sex and even agree that up until a certain point it was consensual. But, as readers will discover, the story changes subtlety, and at one point quite dramatically when sadism enters the picture. Many readers, also, will find Marco a less than sympathetic character (for example, he refers to the exposure as his “ordeal”). Julia, too, has tendencies that readers will find less than desirable. Then there is the question of what passed for acceptable behavior in one time but no longer. In the end, all boils down to she said/he said with the facts as gathered by the narrator for us to make our decisions upon.
As this review is written, the latest chapter in the Matt Lauer saga has broken, with him now accused of rape by an NBC News colleague while covering the 2014 Sochi Olympics. And, as in the book, Lauer and the public are learning of it from a book excerpt. Lasdun’s novel couldn’t be more timely.
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