Additional information
| Weight | 11.84 oz |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 8.3 × 5.5 × 1.0 in |
$17.00
February 1862. The Civil War Is Less Than One Year Old. The Fighting Has Begun In Earnest, And The Nation Has Begun To Realize It Is In For A Long, Bloody Struggle. Meanwhile, President Lincoln’s Beloved Eleven-year-old Son, Willie, Lies Upstairs In The White House, Gravely Ill. In A Matter Of Days, Despite Predictions Of A Recovery, Willie Dies And Is Laid To Rest In A Georgetown Cemetery. My Poor Boy, He Was Too Good For This Earth, The President Says At The Time. God Has Called Him Home. Newspapers Report That A Grief-stricken Lincoln Returns, Alone, To The Crypt Several Times To Hold His Boy’s Body. From That Seed Of Historical Truth, George Saunders Spins A Story Of Familial Love And Loss That Breaks Free Of Its Historical Framework Into A Supernatural Realm Both Hilarious And Terrifying. Willie Lincoln Finds Himself In A Strange Purgatory Where Ghosts Mingle, Gripe, Commiserate, Quarrel, And Enact Bizarre Acts Of Penance. Within This Transitional State — Called, In The Tibetan Tradition, The Bardo — A Monumental Struggle Erupts Over Young Willie’s Soul. Lincoln In The Bardo Is An Astonishing Feat Of Imagination And A Bold Step Forward From One Of The Most Important And Influential Writers Of His Generation. Formally Daring, Generous In Spirit, Deeply Concerned With Matters Of The Heart, It Is A Testament To Fiction’s Ability To Speak Honestly And Powerfully To The Things That Really Matter To Us. Saunders Has Invented A Thrilling New Form That Deploys A Kaleidoscopic, Theatrical Panorama Of Voices To Ask A Timeless, Profound Question: How Do We Live And Love When We Know That Everything We Love Must End? — Publisher’s Description.
In stock
| Weight | 11.84 oz |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 8.3 × 5.5 × 1.0 in |