
Second Place
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Buy Now for £18.99
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Narrated by:
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Kate Fleetwood
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By:
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Rachel Cusk
About this listen
A woman invites a famed artist to visit the remote coastal region where she lives, in the belief that his vision will penetrate the mystery of her life and landscape. Over the course of one hot summer, his provocative presence provides the frame for a study of female fate and male privilege, of the geometries of human relationships, and of the struggle to live morally between our internal and external worlds. With its examination of the possibility that art can both save and destroy us, Second Place is deeply affirming of the human soul, while grappling with its darkest demons.
©2021 Rachel Cusk (P)2021 Faber & FaberThis Narrator worked better at 1.70 x speed to help me grasp the super compact brilliance of a carefully but simply worded, metaphysically sophisticated, hence mindfully meta-pscycho-analytical (h)insight of the meaning of life, killing all meta-external influences (pertaining to fate and the collective consciousness) but in doing so elevating personal responsibility for choices made and especially not made, and celebrating individual potential as endorsed by various good (enriching, stable) or empoverishing (self-aggrandising) relationships rendering personal narrative a new divine status available to all once you learn or care to learn to look. Any (many) fragments worth sticking up on your wall need to be heard at below normal x speed to copy breathlessly.
Recommended that this book be heard twice instantly, and printed copy be purchased to be put in clear sight for all, but especially yourself to see in book case, to remind you of your new-found resolve to stay on the marsh, i.e. the first place you come to when looking for a portrait of yourself.
First Rate
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Thé narration is superb the narrator switches between American accent amd British accents so smoothly I loved how she put so much nuance into the narration which brought it alive
The story itself is also extremely addictive and painful but it was so colourful the writing and I could imagine myself there in the scenes it was so vivid highly recommended
Great narration
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Beware the house guest
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Odd.
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Couldn't relate to the characters
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Slow starter
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This is paralleled in this book when the un-named "M" invites renowned artist "L" to stay for an indefinite period in her family's second home (or place). The story is told in the form of a long letter to an unexplained "Jeffers". (Perhaps we are expected to have already read the 1932 Luhan book.)
Not much action, but much is made of the rather toxic relationship between the two main characters, and between M and the rest of her family, the meaning of life, time and reality.
The book gives the reader plenty to think about and is not onerously long. Long-listed for the Booker Prize, but I don't think it has what it takes to eventually win.
Kate Fleetwood does a reasonable job of reading for us, until she comes to doing voices. Her voices are so bad it's distracting.
Analytic and Reflective
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I hope this author writes more books, loved it!
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Beautiful narrative
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There are a string of (at times) beautifully written observations but they could have been attributed to anyone. Whole parts of the book remain unexplained - such as a character described as “the devil” at the start of the book. The framing device is also unexplained - you have to read about the context elsewhere in order to understand it.
I guess I just don’t “get it”.
Awful
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