JESSE BALL is the author of four previous novels, including Silence Once Begun and Samedi the Deafness, and several works of verse, bestiaries, and sketchbooks. He has been named a finalist for the 2015 New York Public Library Young Lions Fiction Award and a 2014 Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Ball received an NEA creative writing fellowship for 2014 and the 2008 Paris Review Plimpton Prize, and his verse has been included in the Best American Poetry series. He gives classes on general practice at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago’s Master of Fine Arts Writing program. A Cure for Suicide is long-listed for the National Book Award 2015.
From the Hardcover edition.
A Cure for Suicide
by Jesse Ball
eBook
-
ISBN-13:
9781101870136
- Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
- Publication date: 07/21/2015
- Series: Vintage Contemporaries
- Sold by: Random House
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 240
- File size: 5 MB
Available on NOOK devices and apps
Want a NOOK? Explore Now
***LONG-LISTED FOR THE NATIONAL BOOK AWARD***
From the author of Silence Once Begun, a beguiling new novel about a man starting over at the most basic level, and the strange woman who insinuates herself into his life and memory.
A man and a woman have moved into a small house in a small village. The woman is an “examiner,” the man, her “claimant.” The examiner is both doctor and guide, charged with teaching the claimant a series of simple functions: this is a chair, this is a fork, this is how you meet people. She makes notes in her journal about his progress: he is showing improvement yet his dreams are troubling. One day the examiner brings the claimant to a party, where he meets Hilda, a charismatic but volatile woman whose surprising assertions throw everything the claimant has learned into question. What is this village? Why is he here? And who is Hilda? A fascinating novel of love, illness, despair, and betrayal, A Cure for Suicide is the most captivating novel yet from one of our most audacious and original young writers.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
-
- Silence Once Begun
- by Jesse Ball
-
- Lowboy
- by John Wray
-
- Purple America
- by Rick Moody
-
- Where the Line Bleeds
- by Jesmyn Ward
-
- The Heaven of Mercury: A Novel
- by Brad Watson
-
- A Dangerous Woman: A Novel
- by Mary McGarry Morris
-
- Arch of Triumph: A Novel
- by Erich Maria RemarqueWalter SorellDenver Lindley
-
- Hangsaman
- by Shirley JacksonFrancine Prose
-
- Passing On
- by Penelope Lively
-
- The Sea House: A Novel
- by Esther Freud
-
- The Confessions of Max Tivoli
- by Andrew Sean Greer
Recently Viewed
This dystopian novel from Ball (Silence Once Begun) is both a puzzle box and a haunting love story. In the opening pages, the reader is dropped into a future world where brainwashed and childlike adult “claimants,” cared for one-on-one by mostly female “examiners,” are being systematically resettled in bucolic villages. One examiner, Teresa, is working to rehabilitate Anders, a claimant. However, memories of his previous life are intruding into Anders’s dreams—and eventually into his new life. In the next section of the novel, a new claimant and examiner are introduced. This claimant, Martin, progresses smoothly, until he meets Hilda, a female claimant who is keenly aware that something is wrong with their world. Each section illuminates the characters and situations from the previous portions, which draws the reader into the material more effectively and heartbreakingly than a traditional structure would allow. This method also gives Ball the opportunity to play with the conventions of the dystopian genre, addressing the surprising sociological cause of his alternate reality. Befitting the intricate premise, Ball’s prose, mostly dialogue between examiners and claimants, veers from precise to obfuscating and back again, as though the novel were a film rapidly going in and out of focus. Whatever the source of this book’s elusive magic, it should cement Ball’s reputation as a technical innovator whose work delivers a powerful emotional impact. (July)
“One of the finest things Ball has ever written, a magical, gripping burst of emotional history.” —Chicago Tribune
“War doesn’t exist anymore, and neither do prisons, in the seemingly not-so-distant future where Jesse Ball’s magnetic, suspenseful, occasionally heart-rending fifth novel, A Cure for Suicide, unfolds…. Hypnotic.” —The Boston Globe
“[A Cure for Suicide’s] tone and soft, murky edges make me think of the Gilead of Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid’s Tale—a place where it’s the quiet that haunts you, the incredibly short distances between the real and the fictional.” —Jason Sheehan, NPR
“Captivating. . . . Ball’s lean, clinical prose puts us in mind of Samuel Beckett, and his heady concoction of unsettling atmosphere, sterile environments and authorial obfuscations and distortions is redolent of the potent brew that powered recent dark fables from Chang-rae Lee and Howard Jacobson. . . . Refreshingly unconventional, the novel sees a highly original writer take another left-field leap in a daring and rewarding direction.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune
“Ball deftly explores questions with the eye of a poet and the logic of a philosopher, revealing new facets with perfect timing and acuity.” —The New York Times Book Review
“A rich, tragic love story . . . . An enthralling thought experiment that considers the value of memory versus the pain of grief.” —The Huffington Post
“The juxtaposition of the commonplace and the darkly bizarre has become something of a specialty of [Ball’s], as has his books’ skill at reflecting the ongoing struggle of the individual in a society based on conformity.” —Chicago Tribune
“Both a puzzle box and a haunting love story . . . Whatever the source of this book’s elusive magic, it should cement Ball’s reputation as a technical innovator whose work delivers a powerful emotional impact.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Profound. . . . Ball performs the remarkable task of pruning away layers of readerly skepticism in order to find the inherent beauty of small moments.” —Flavorwire
“A vision of a society that flees from hurt, numbing the tormented in order to save them.” —The Atlantic
“Prompts a conversation about life—how we enter it, how we navigate its shoals, and how we exit it.” —The New York Journal of Books
“A spare, spooky, muffled realm of continual surveillance and absolute control . . . Ball slyly exposes the survival-focused aspects of human interactions, from small talk to shared meals.” —Booklist
“Elegant and spooky, dystopian and poetic.” —The Millions
“A Cure for Suicide ponders memory, identity, love, desire and choice. The question that remains is a heavy one indeed: Would you choose to start over?” —Paste
A nameless young woman, known as the examiner, enters a house where a nameless young man sleeps. His role is that of the claimant. When he awakes, he knows nothing of how to live. The examiner's task is to teach him everything from the function of a chair to how to distinguish strangers within the course of 20.5 days. In lines spare as poetry, this section of the story unfolds in hypnotic progression; readers know little more than the hapless claimant. Why is this painting important? What is behind the claimant's recurring nightmares? Is the examiner's purpose for good or evil? There are jarring hints that the claimants are "processed" over and over until they are human shells. But before readers can come to a conclusion, the entire narrative switches course. In the second part, in one long rush of words, the young man who will become the claimant is telling his story to an interlocutor, who will determine if he qualifies for a cure for suicide. In contrast to the first section, this tale is circuitous and tangled, interrupted constantly by the young man's sorrowful recriminations. The final segment brings readers back to the examiners and the original claimant. An older examiner offers an explanation of sorts in the form of a short play before the tale ends on a satisfyingly surreal note. VERDICT Teens who enjoy innovative dystopian literature, such as David Mitchell's The Bone Clocks (Random, 2014), will appreciate this dark, clever tale.—Diane Colson, Nashville Public Library, TN
A man and a woman are locked in a strange therapeutic cycle in this speculative fiction by literary experimentalist Ball (Silence Once Begun, 2014, etc.) Though he often protests that he doesn't want his books to be considered "trickery," Ball once again uses a fair amount of deception, smoke, and mirrors to draw readers into his poetically nimble but characteristically peculiar story. He borrows a bit of science fiction's flexible plausibility and a few twists from the likes of M. Night Shyamalan and sets his story in a remote village that wouldn't be out of place on AMC's recent remake of The Prisoner. A man awakens in a Victorian house in "Gentlest Village D4." He has no memory, not even of his name—the novel calls him "Claimant." A woman lives in the house; she is "the examiner," who tells him that he was very sick and nearly died. Over the course of the first section, the examiner teaches the claimant about all manner of things and records his troubling dreams. Eventually, the claimant and the examiner take on names, but once the cycle restarts and they move to a new village, they take on different names, and the claimant keeps encountering a woman in the village who stirs unfamiliar but persistent feelings in him. Ball is playing with a lot of conceptual territory here, contemplating memory, identity, and isolation, among other themes. The novel eventually pulls back the curtain on "the Process of Villages," this strange therapeutic transformation invented to allow men to start over completely with different identities. There are times it feels rushed between the spare, meticulous play going on between the claimant and the examiner and other breathless sections with unbroken waves of narrative exposition—the shift in tones can be jarring. This may be Ball's most self-contained work, but it's also one of his most fragile and one that may not hold up under focused scrutiny by a wider audience.