9780670440573-0670440574-A Loss of Heart

A Loss of Heart

ISBN-13: 9780670440573
ISBN-10: 0670440574
Edition: First Edition
Author: Robert McCrum
Publication date: 1982
Publisher: Viking Adult
Format: Hardcover 282 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780670440573
ISBN-10: 0670440574
Edition: First Edition
Author: Robert McCrum
Publication date: 1982
Publisher: Viking Adult
Format: Hardcover 282 pages

Summary

A Loss of Heart (ISBN-13: 9780670440573 and ISBN-10: 0670440574), written by authors Robert McCrum, was published by Viking Adult in 1982. With an overall rating of 4.0 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent A Loss of Heart (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.59.

Description

"7 "As in his first novel, In the Secret State, McCrum displays a talent for moody, atmospheric narration here but again lavishes that talent on a thin story--this time the familiar, didactic tale of a passive, apolitical man's radicalization. McCrum's reluctant protagonist is Philip Taylor, 30, a London academic who ""had never taken a risk worth speaking of in his life."" But Philip's older brother Daniel, an investigative journalist, has taken a whole range of risks: turning his back on the family business (pharmaceuticals), writing anti-Establishment exposÉs, permanently alienating their old father. And, though Philip hasn't seen Daniel in years, he suddenly gets caught up in his brother's world--when he gets a call from Daniel's girlfriend, counterculture journalist Stevie: Daniel has disappeared, Stevie is worried, and indeed Daniel soon turns up dead--an apparent victim of sheer loss-of-heart. So Philip needs ""to know how it all went wrong."" He retraces Daniel's career, really understanding for the first time what Daniel learned (to devastating effect) while in Africa: that the family's business in the Third World was corrupt, dangerous, even genocidal. So now, moving into Daniel's house with Stevie (who literally slaps him out of passivity), Philip says: ""I share your anger and Daniel's anger--you have both taught me that."" And when he discovers that a terrorist is storing explosives at the house, Philip keeps the secret; after all, if he went to the police, he'd lose ""the rapport with Stevie, the unraveling of Daniel's past, and the tiny surges of self-confidence he was now experiencing for the first time in years. . . ."" Unfortunately, however, Philip has discovered activism too late: the terrorist, tracked down by the cops, holds Philip hostage--with fatal results. In Britain, perhaps, this contrived, theme-heavy scenario is less stale than it is here; very similar American stories were rampant through the Seventies.

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