Rabu, 22 Desember 2010

Naked Singularity, by Victoria N. Alexander

Naked Singularity, by Victoria N. Alexander

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Naked Singularity, by Victoria N. Alexander

Naked Singularity, by Victoria N. Alexander



Naked Singularity, by Victoria N. Alexander

Download Ebook PDF Naked Singularity, by Victoria N. Alexander

When Hali’s father asks her to help him commit suicide to spare the family the misery of a long illness, she reluctantly agrees. Hali’s family insists on letting “God’s will” decide. Hali, brooding upon the idea of predetermination and an afterlife in a way that is both challenging and deeply moving, is ultimately unable to do what her father wishes. She is forced to accept the help of a manipulative male nurse, adding further complications and a slow and painful end.

Naked Singularity, by Victoria N. Alexander

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2412980 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-05-05
  • Released on: 2015-05-05
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Naked Singularity, by Victoria N. Alexander

From Publishers Weekly Alexander (Smoking Hopes) takes on a gut-wrenching topic in this ambitious but uneven second novel, which tells the story of a Texas woman who returns home to care for her dying father and faces a profound dilemma when he asks her to help him commit suicide. Hali is helping her father, Dave, in his battle against throat cancer, a fight that seems winnable when his chemotherapy works and the cancer goes into remission. But Dave's respite proves brief, and when the cancer begins to advance again, Hali knows the request her father will soon make. At first, the plan seems simple: Hali and Thomas, one of the two nurses who provide round-the-clock home care, will administer a lethal but painless mix of morphine, alcohol and other painkillers. But the first hit of morphine fails due to Dave's tremendous resistance to the drug, the other nurse begins to suspect euthanasia, and their plans go dangerously awry. Alexander writes eloquently about the family's daily emotional pain, but the flashbacks describing Dave's alcoholism and violent treatment of his children are overfamiliar. The major flaw here is the lurid, macabre ending, which involves the attraction between Thomas and Hali, a climax that seems barely believable given Alexander's portrayal of Hali's satisfying marriage to Seth, a sensitive artist who, like Hali's two older sisters, remains an undeveloped character. This unsatisfying conclusion overshadows the book's strengths. Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews

A far cry from the hot-hostess high-jinks of Smoking Hopes (1996), Alexander's first novel, this is a painfully personal tale of Daddy's Little Girl come home to Texas to agonize over whether she should help him die quietly, thereby avoiding his gruesome end from throat cancer. Hali may be diminutive, but she's no lightweight, being a PhD in teleology and a major babe besides. When she arrives on the scene from New York, however, where her "open" relationship with an artist on the cusp of fame has hit a rough patch, she`s already aware that she may have to fulfill a tough special role for the family. At first, there's hope, as Dad reads optimism in his doctor's evasions and the punishing therapy seems to be having its desired effect. Father and daughter discover a renewed appreciation for each other's cosmological interests and similar philosophies. But not many months pass before a different scenario emerges: last-chance surgery is ruled out as the cancer spreads to his spinal column and Hali is at Dad's bedside when he speaks privately to her of helping him out. Eventually, she agrees, and with the help of a muscle-bound drifter in nurse's garb she becomes the family Kevorkian - except that Dad won't die no matter how many drug cocktails they give him, and Hali and the nurse feel increasingly the tugs of a fatal attraction.

The emotions are raw at times, but there's a cool tone of postmodern post-mortem throughout as well, raising hackles and sympathy from first to last.

Review Beautifully written, Naked Singularity effectively ties disparate philosophies together. Demonstrating that the relationship between the hardest, coldest picture of the universe and the inexplicable pattern of human life and the mysteries of the human heart is far more complex than any quick analysis can explain, it reveals something meaningful about the way our contemporary world works and demonstrates that, in the end,no matter how much we learn or think we know, we are still our fathers' children. --Texas Books in ReviewAlexander's writing is poetic as she allows the reader to feel without telling them what it is they are supposed to be feeling. Naked Singularity is sad, touching, and heartfelt, a taut story about love and living, hate and dying. I only hope fans of Victoria N. Alexander's writing do not have to wait nearly another decade for more of her wonderful storytelling. --curledup.com


Naked Singularity, by Victoria N. Alexander

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Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Heart breaking must read. By Heather A. Treulieb This is a heartbreaking story of a daughter's love for her father. The drama moves between reflection on the past and fear of what may come, while the present marches inexorably on. The characters are real with a mix of bad and good. Leaves a question, "what would I have done?"

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. The meaning of life, the meaning of the book By Valerie What gives life its meaning? This is the question that Victoria Alexander takes on in this gripping and sad story about a man (Dave MacDonald) who asks his daughter (Hali) to help him end his life gracefully after he finds out that his throat cancer is terminal. Alexander looks at the idea that life’s ending somehow changes and rewrites everything that went before, as if the life were a novel, whose author is shaping events. Dave MacDonald’s final days do not go the way he planned, and Alexander admonishes those who would try to control things that are beyond control.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Tragic By bruce kuehnle It's a strange fact of life that some of the most difficult and painful situations can also make us laugh, mostly at the absurdity of our struggle against the inevitable. Naked Singularity dares to look at the hapless way we try to control events in our lives. There is some great writing here.

See all 6 customer reviews... Naked Singularity, by Victoria N. Alexander


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