His Illegal Self (Hardcover)

Author: Peter Carey
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Product Summary
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780307263728
Publisher: Knopf Publishing Group
Publish Date: 2/5/2008
Buy.com Sku: 204795737
Item#: RCRSJW
Dimensions (in Inches) 9.75H x 6.5L x 1T
Pages: 288
 
Raised in isolated privilege by his New York grandmother, Che is the precocious son of radical student activists at Harvard in the late 1960s. Yearning for his famous outlaw parents, he bravely confronts his life, learning that nothing is what it seems.
 
Annotation:
In an interview with the Paris Review Peter Carey has said that being sent away to a boarding school at the age of 11 "produce[d] an endless string of orphan characters in my books." 7-year-old Che Selkirk, the protagonist of Carey's novel HIS ILLEGAL SELF isn't an orphan per se, but he's been raised by his grandmother in New York Upper East Side and has no memory of his radical, possibly terrorist, parents. When a young woman named Dial shows up in his apartment, he assumes she's his mother, and the two are soon on the run from the law, finally ending up in an Australian outback commune, without running water, trying to survive in the land Carey has called "the country of orphans." Selected by the New York Times Book Review as a Notable Book of 2008.

 

Praise
"A cunning fugitive adventure...[with] a bang-up conclusion." 10/08/2007

"This isn't the first fictional work to explore the militant radical underground of the late 1960s and early '70s, but it may well be the best." (starred review) 11/01/2007

"Carey's unique take on the conflict between the need to belong and the dream of freedom during the days of rage over the Vietnam War is at once terrifying and mythic." - Donna Seaman 11/15/2007

"In HIS ILLEGAL SELF, Peter Carey draws as much magic from the muslin of contemporary speech as he has previously from the lustrous velvet of his more fanciful prose....You might think this would constrain his powers, but if anything, it has concentrated them....Exquisite." - Liesl Schillinger 02/10/2008

"Carey's often beautiful novel, one of his best recent works, has the bruising tang of all his fiction, in which crooked colloquialism...and poetic formality combine. The result is brilliantly vital: the world bulges out of the sentences." - James Wood 03/03/2008


 
Author Bio
Peter Carey
Carey studied science at Monash University in Australia but was in a serious car accident just before exams, and flunked out--which he says gave him an excuse to end his formal education. He got married and then went to work in advertising in Sydney and London, briefly running his own agency; he also began to write. His first collection of stories, THE FAT MAN IN HISTORY, was published in 1974, after which he began to write fiction full time. In the 1980s, Carey and his second wife and their family moved to Greenwich Village, where he taught fiction-writing at New York University. Several of his novels have been filmed, most notably OSCAR AND LUCINDA.

 
 
Read A Chapter
Chapter 1

There were no photographs of the boy's father in the house upstate. He had been persona non grata since Christmas 1964, six months before the boy was born. There were plenty of pictures of his mom. There she was with short blond hair, her eyes so white against her tan. And that was her also, with black hair, not even a sister to the blonde girl, although maybe they shared a kind of bright attention.

She was an actress like her grandma, it was said. She could change herself into anyone. The boy had no reason to disbelieve this, not having seen his mother since the age of two. She was the prodigal daughter, the damaged saint, like the icon that Grandpa once brought back from Athens—shining silver, musky incense—although no one had ever told the boy how his mother smelled.

Then, when the boy was almost eight, a woman stepped out of the elevator into the apartment on East Sixty-second Street and he recognized her straightaway. No one had told h
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