Nothing to Be Frightened of (Hardcover)

Author: Julian Barnes
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Product Summary
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780307269638
Publisher: Knopf Publishing Group
Publish Date: 9/2/2008
Buy.com Sku: 207886437
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Dimensions (in Inches) 8.75H x 6L x 0.75T
Pages: 256
 
Two years after the bestselling "Arthur & George," Barnes presents an essay on mortality that touches on faith, science, and family, as well as a rich array of exemplary figures who have confronted the most basic fact of life: its inevitable extinction.
 
Annotation:
English author Julian Barnes (FLAUBERT'S PARROT; ENGLAND, ENGLAND) has been contemplating death from an early age, and in this meandering, witty, and beautiful reverie on being and nothingness, he shows the delightful depths of his dark fascination. His approach towards his subject is rich and varied, drawing on his personal experiences and attitudes, including the death of his parents, and also the writings of Montaigne, Stendhal, Flaubert, and others on the subject of death. Occasionally his brother Jonathan, a philosopher, appears via email to criticize Barnes's beliefs. The result is a bracing book, bleak and funny in equal measures, full of old truths and older mysteries, a book to make you reconsider your values, and to give you pause before you go to bed. Selected as one of the New York Times 10 Best Books of 2008.

 

Praise
"As its brilliant title punningly hints, NOTHING TO BE FRIGHTENED OF offers an extended meditation on human mortality, but one that is neither clinical nor falsely consoling. Instead, the witty and melancholy author...simply converses with us about our most universal fear....Beautifully done." - Michael Dirda 08/31/2008

"How can you be frightened of Nothing? On this simple question Barnes has hung an elegant memoir and meditation, a deep seismic tremor of a book that keeps rumbling and grumbling in the mind for weeks thereafter." - Garrison Keillor 10/03/2008


 
Author Bio
Julian Barnes
The son of two French teachers, Julian Barnes studied modern languages, including French and Russian, in preparatory school. Raised without religion, Barnes says he has never been inside a church. At Oxford, he briefly studied psychology and philosophy, then returned to French. Upon graduation, he took a job doing research for the new supplement to THE OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY (letters A-G), but became restless after three years and decided to study law, specializing in contracts. By the age of 30, however, he had quit the law to become a full-time book and television critic. Four years later, his first novel was published. Barnes has been the London correspondent for The New Yorker and, in addition--a little-known aspect of his career--he has written a series of crime novels published under the name Dan Kavanaugh. Many of Barnes's novels are subtly autobiographical, all are satirical, and some of them are at least partly about being English but having an attraction to France. He hates to repeat himself, and in fact, each of his books is vastly different from all the others.

 
 
Read A Chapter
I don''t believe in God, but I miss Him. That''s what I say when the question is put. I asked my brother, who has taught philosophy at Oxford, Geneva, and the Sorbonne, what he thought of such a statement, without revealing that it was my own. He replied with a single word: "Soppy."

The person to begin with is my maternal grandmother, Nellie Louisa Scoltock, nee Machin. She was a teacher in Shropshire until she married my grandfather, Bert Scoltock. Not Bertram, not Albert, just Bert: so christened, so called, so cremated. He was a headmaster with a certain mechanical dash to him: a motorcycle-and-sidecar man, then owner of a Lanchester, then, in retirement, driver of a rather pompously sporty Triumph Roadster, with a three-person bench seat in front, and two bucket seats when the top was down. By the time I knew them, my grandparents had come south to be near their only child. Grandma went to the Women''s Institute; she pickled and bottled; she plucked and roasted the
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