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The Life to Come

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Set in Australia, France, and Sri Lanka, The Life to Come is about the stories we tell and don't tell ourselves as individuals, as societies, and as nations. Driven by a vivid cast of characters, it explores necessary emigration, the art of fiction, and ethnic and class conflict. As Hilary Mantel has written, "I so admire Michelle de Kretser's formidable technique-her characters feel alive, and she can create a sweeping narrative that encompasses years and yet still retain the sharp, almost hallucinatory detail." Pippa is an Australian writer who longs for the success of her novelist teacher and eventually comes to fear that she "missed everything important." In Paris, Celeste tries to convince herself that her feelings for her married lover are reciprocated. Ash makes strategic use of his childhood in Sri Lanka, but blots out the memory of a tragedy from that time and can't commit to his trusting girlfriend, Cassie. Sri Lankan Christabel, who is generously offered a passage to Sydney by Bunty, an old acquaintance, endures her dull job and envisions a brighter future that "rose, glittered, and sank back," while she neglects the love close at hand.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 29, 2018
      De Kretser’s sprawling follow-up to her novella Springtime features many different lives converging and diverging across decades and continents. In Sydney, Pippa wants to make her mark on Australian fiction, while her former professor, George, distances himself from his cult following the success of his own books. A few streets away, Cassie falls for Ash, mesmerized by his mysterious boyhood in Sri Lanka. In Paris, Celeste works as a translator while reckoning with her complicated history with the city and the lover she rearranges her life for. And all the while, over many decades, Sri Lankan Christabel and her childhood friend Bunty build a quiet life together in Australia after reconnecting as adults. While each section can stand alone, together they create a joyful and mournful meditation on the endless small pleasures and complications of life: the difficulties of immigration, the logistics of infidelity, the creativity and insight born of jealousy and spite. In de Kretser’s sure-footed and often surprising prose, life is rendered as something that’s “tedious yet require concentration, like a standard-issue dream.”

    • AudioFile Magazine
      In this globe- and decade-spanning audiobook, author de Kretser follows a collection of loosely connected characters, most of them Australian immigrants or �migr�s. As the novel travels from Australia to Sri Lanka and France, and back to Australia, narrator Shiromi Arserio capably moves through a wide range of accents. Pippa, a moderately successful, moderately talented author, is the through line, but de Kretser is more interested in the complexities and contradictions of contemporary life and relationships than the story of any single character. The sizable cast can be difficult to track, and Arserio's consistent inflection does not always provide clues. Her wry delivery, however, perfectly captures the cutting observations about contemporary life. E.C. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine
    • Books+Publishing

      July 17, 2017
      The Life to Come is Michelle de Kretser’s first novel since her Miles Franklin Literary Award-winning Questions of Travel in 2012, and it affirms her as a writer of great perception and eloquence. Over five extended character studies, de Kretser skewers intellectual artifice, cosmopolitan pretensions, moral absolutism and casual hypocrisies—the everyday flaws and ego tics that trail us all. Her characters include a French-Australian translator frustrated by her covert love affair with a married woman; a chronically lonely elderly Sri Lankan woman living in Sydney; and a mid-list author in a state of mixed denial and awareness of her own mediocracy. The characters’ lives intersect, sometimes intimately, sometimes only glancingly. Like Questions of Travel, this novel explores ideas of transience and foreignness, the permeability of spaces and countries, and the fragility and temporality of human connection. De Kretser’s writing is adept and engaging, and often stunning at the sentence level. Like the fiction of Drusilla Modjeska or Gail Jones, she writes demanding and sometimes dense literary fiction, and some readers will find The Life to Come challenging. Others will appreciate its many delights, particularly de Kretser’s nuanced writing, her artful characterisation and the novel’s tender, unsentimental humanity. Veronica Sullivan is prize manager of the Stella Prize

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  • English

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