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Affliction
  

Affliction (Unbound)

by Russell Banks (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (40 customer reviews)

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5 used from CDN$ 10.86

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From Amazon.com

If Russell Banks hadn't become a writer, he thinks he would have wound up stabbed to death in a barroom brawl. He is the son of a two-fisted, drunken New England plumber, and the grief of fatherly combat resonates through his work like the background radiation of the big bang. Banks became a violently drinking plumber himself--and then a Pulitzer Prize-nominated Princeton literary giant and one of the luckiest Oscar-buzzed writers in Hollywood history.

(The Atom Egoyan adaptation of Banks's brilliant novel The Sweet Hereafter perfectly captures its brooding beauty, and Affliction may be Paul Schrader's finest film since he wrote Taxi Driver.)

Affliction transmutes Banks's painful past into fiction. His divorced protagonist, Wade Whitehouse, 41, is imprisoned by fate in Lawford, New Hampshire, a hell frozen over. He digs wells for chump change, lives in a trailer, drinks, and alienates his daughter by dragging her to a miserable Halloween costume party. In two weeks' time, Wade demolishes his pitiable hopes of family happiness, drawn into a rigorously plausible series of disastrous deaths. In flashbacks to his Dad-abused youth, we see how Wade wound up such a Dostoyevskian clown.

Banks has a mind of winter: when Wade sees his dead parent, the scene unfolds with the cold logic of ice-crystal formation. The story is narrated by Wade's kid brother, the family's sole escapee to college, in a cool, distanced way. Both brothers contain aspects of Banks, but each breaks free of autobiography. This is one haunting novel.



From Publishers Weekly

Divorced, inept, confused and stubborn Wade Whitehouse, harrowed by snow and bone-freezing cold for the several days of the novel's duration, is afflicted with a nostalgic, romantic streak. Wade's dream of marrying Margie, a goodhearted waitress, and making a home for his angry daughter Jill, slowly erodes. PW called this a "masterful novel."
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

40 Reviews
5 star:
 (27)
4 star:
 (10)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (40 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
4.0 out of 5 stars Early, Long, Forever Winter, May 9 2002
By L. Dann "adhdmom" (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is a tough book. It is the last years of a family that has lived in the miseries of violence and addiction. These are always complicated sooner or later by poverty and loss of soul. The very landscape has been beaten up and bought up and drilled to make it little more than a ghost of nature. Twisted and tortuous is the path of the lives and the land. The buildings are erected similarly, no beauty and not much comfort. The people who have the money are not at all nice to the ones who haven't. Corruption, exploitation and every now and then somebody gets brave enough to take off. Wade, our everyman, has a friend who made it, and he wonders after a certain amount of booze, on certain nights, if he might be able to do the same. But he knows he won't. This is a land of trailer parks perched on concrete slabs, where people fight and love in bars, with half working neon signs casting eery shadows over treacherous, icy roads.
Wade Whitehouse is a large man, with strength, sex appeal and a wound racing through him like the Mississippi and all its tributaries. His tale is told through his brother, the questionable survivor, who went to college, got out, has a career, and isn't a blackout drunk. There is the sister turned evangelical Christian, with her own frightening, crazy children. There are the ghosts of the two other brothers, dead together in some offensive in Nam. They too, haunt the bizarre story, a mystery, a murder, and the climax of a legacy.
My friends in Maine were simply out of their minds over Banks, and out of respect from these Chicagoan, Wisconsin transplants whose art awakenings I had shared, I entered into these readings seriously. While I recognize the brilliance, it just isn't my geography, just as I suppose I miss so much in Southern writers, but somehow, I can relate more, I feel, to the Welty's and Faulkners and Flannery O'Connors and so many others.
The symbolism is intense. A mother who is frozen to death and the nagging, break-through pain of a long-decayed tooth. Throbbing, heart breaking and cold.
Check it out, everyone should sample Banks. He is most assuredly, we are told, Wade with a miracle. His talent is indeed miraculous, I just don't worship there.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Perfection, May 6 2002
By Nifflefoot (Yellowknife, Northwest Territories) - See all my reviews
One of the finest novels in the last 25 years. The most convincing and natural dialogue I have ever read. Russell Banks is the America's best living novelist, and this is his masterpiece.
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5.0 out of 5 stars wayyyy cool, April 24 2002
By "rp7mf" (New York) - See all my reviews
dude, this book was rad. it was so funny when the little girl cries because her dad of her dad beat her dad. i liked the ending because the brother talks about people working at video stores and video stores are cool. read this book anyd you will see what im talking about.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Rugged, tough as nails -- and powerful
There are a lot of books out there by "cowboy poets" or sort of macho-ish writers. "Affliction" has no such pretensions, but it's more austere, rugged, and... Read more
Published on Dec 25 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars Post Modern Alienation
Russell Bank's books are always good. This one is top notch: more Post Modern alienation at its best.
Published on Nov 26 2001 by E. Otto

5.0 out of 5 stars Another Bank's great
Why do bad things happen to good people? Because their parents (stink). At least that's one of the messages that Russell Banks conveys in this dark tale of past abuses causing... Read more
Published on Nov 17 2001 by TerryB

5.0 out of 5 stars Banks is the master at writing men at moments of decision
You're not going to like any of the men in Affliction, but you will care about them nonetheless. This is an excellent book that's not afraid to show real relationships and... Read more
Published on Sep 11 2001 by Angela

4.0 out of 5 stars Emotional, but slow
'Affliction' is the study of a man. A sad and disappointed man. The character of Wade can't be neither called a hero, nor a anti-hero. Read more
Published on May 27 2001 by David Theis

5.0 out of 5 stars cool stuff
dude, this boook is cool. i liked it from the start. it was cool how the dad of the little girl's dad is crazy but he is cool. it is awesome stuff when he beats his son. Read more
Published on May 6 2001 by rp7mf

5.0 out of 5 stars Quite Possible the Saddest Novel I've Ever Read
Film critic Roger Ebert once stated that if someone wanted to understand the psychology of a man driven to abuse his family, they should view Martin Scorsese's RAGING BULL. Read more
Published on Feb 18 2001 by Stone Junction

3.0 out of 5 stars try Ernest Hebert
Affliction is apparently a somewhat autobiographical novel about Wade Whitehouse, a crude & somewhat brutal son of a truly barbarous father. Read more
Published on Oct 13 2000 by Orrin C. Judd

4.0 out of 5 stars A Wonderful, Haunting Novel
This is my first Russell Banks novel and I'm so glad that I discovered him!!! "Affliction" is a wonderful, incredibly written story about a man named Wade Whitehouse... Read more
Published on Sep 6 2000 by N. Hochman

5.0 out of 5 stars great book
I think this is a great book but I disagree with the critique below that talks about the class aspects of the book. Read more
Published on Feb 25 2000

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