The Astral (novel) explained

The Astral
Author:Kate Christensen
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Fiction
Published:2011 (Doubleday)
Media Type:Print (Hardback)
Pages:311
Isbn:9780385530910
Oclc:666230046

The Astral is a 2011 novel by Kate Christensen. It is about a poet, Harry Quirk, who having been thrown out of the family apartment at the Astral by his wife Luz, attempts to get his life back together.

Reception

Daniel Handler, reviewing The Astral in The New York Times, called it "an object lesson on the current realist novel, with its pitfalls and pleasures both as clear as the book’s unsentimental vision." and concluded "the realist novel believes that we are, all of us ordinary people in our ordinary lives, enchanted already. .. But then when I open a novel, I expect something other than the ordinary circumstances that already surround me, be it in language or story. I think most readers do. To expect otherwise, as Christensen does in “The Astral,” seems a little, well, unrealistic."[1] The Washington Post found "that Christensen has somehow — again — created a captivatingly believable male narrator".[2]

The Astral has also been reviewed by Booklist,[3] Library Journal,[4] BookPage Reviews,[5] Kirkus Reviews,[6] and Publishers Weekly.[7]

Notes and References

  1. News: Handler . Daniel . July 29, 2011 . Sunday Book Review: The Pitfalls and Pleasures of the Current Realist Novel . The New York Times . February 7, 2017.
  2. News: Charles . Ron . June 14, 2011 . Books: 'The Astral' by Kate Christensen . The Washington Post . February 7, 2017.
  3. Web site: The Astral : a novel . A satisfying redoing of a man undone. . Buffalo and Erie County Public Library . February 7, 2017.
  4. Web site: The Astral : a novel: Reviews . This could be a real charmer; watch. . catalog.wccls.org . February 7, 2017.
  5. Web site: The Astral: A Novel . With acute perception and witty humor, this bittersweet novel moves along at a tremendous pace, entertaining until its climactic final scene. . kcls.bibliocommons.com . February 7, 2017.
  6. Web site: The Astral (starred review) . May 4, 2011 . A masterpiece of comedy and angst. Think Gulley Jimson of Joyce Cary’s The Horses Mouth transported from 1930s London to present-day Brooklyn. . Kirkus Media LLC . February 7, 2017.
  7. Web site: The Astral (starred review) . April 11, 2011 . Like the rapidly gentrifying Brooklyn of its setting, Christensen's unremittingly wonderful latest (after Trouble) is populated by an odd but captivating mix of characters. . Publishers Weekly . PWxyz LLC . February 7, 2017.