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There But For The

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
At a dinner party in the posh London suburb of Greenwich, Miles Garth suddenly leaves the table midway through the meal, locks himself in an upstairs room, and refuses to leave. An eclectic group of neighbors and friends slowly gathers around the house, and the story of Miles is one told from the points of view of four of them: a woman in her forties called Anna, a man in his sixties called Mark, a woman in her eighties called May, and a ten-year-old child called Brooke. The thing is . . . none of these people knows Miles anything more than glancingly. So how much is it possible to know about a stranger? And what are the consequences of even the most casual, most fleeting meetings we have every day with other human beings?Brilliantly audacious, disarmingly playful, full of Smith's trademark wit and puns, There But For The is a deft exploration of the human need for separation-from our pasts and from one another-and the redemptive possibilities for connections.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      The sweet lilt in Anne Flosnik's intonation lifts this unusual audiobook to a notable height. Essentially the story of a man who locks himself in his hosts' guest bedroom at a dinner party, the novel assumes the point of view of a new character with each new chapter. Flosnik makes her way through all their voices adroitly, with only occasional distractions, most of which stem from the text itself. Some dialogue, for example, is clunky and self-conscious, but the overall appeal of the production remains steady. Smith's prose is successful more often than not with its thought-provoking plot twists and unconventional characters. Listeners hoping for something different will find what they seek in this recording. L.B.F. (c) AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 25, 2011
      This startling lark from Smith (The Accidental) is so much more than the sum of its parts. Both breezy and devastating, the novel radiates from a whimsical center: Miles Garth, a dinner party guest, decides to leave the world behind and lock himself in his hostess's spare room, refusing to come out and communicating only by note. Four charmers with only tenuous links to Miles, nicknamed Milo by the growing crowd camped outside the suburban Greenwich, London house, narrate the proceedings: Anna, a girl who knew Miles briefly in the past; Mark, a melancholy gay man who Miles met watching Shakespeare at the Old Vic; May Young, an elderly woman who Miles helped grieve her daughter's death; and the wonderful, "preternaturally articulate" Brooke, arguably the cleverest 10-year-old in contemporary literature. Together they create a portrait not so much of Milesâbecause none of them really knows himâbut of the zeitgeist of their society. In a lovely departure, and in spite of the fact that there is not one ordinary, carefree character in this whole tale, all parents are literate, loving, and tolerant: though Mark is exhausted and sad, his famous mum speaks to him, in verse no less, from beyond the grave; though May is trapped by dementia, she was a kind mother to her ill-fated daughter; and though Brooke is clearly plagued by attention deficit disorder and is misunderstood and disliked at school, her parents love her dearly. This fine, unusual novel is sweet and melancholy, indulgent of language and of the fragile oddballs who so relish in it.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 30, 2012
      In the middle of an English dinner party, Miles Garth excuses himself from the table, locks himself in the guest room, and refuses to leave. As the weeks and then months drag on, hostess Gen—portrayed by narrator Anne Flosnik as an afflicted damsel in distress—goes through Miles’s address book to enlist friends, however remote, to coax the unwanted boarder out of his lair. The first rescue attempt is made by Anna—who met Miles decades earlier on a school trip—whom Flosnik deftly renders as a classy and good-natured Glaswegian, perplexed that Miles even remembered her. After Anna, Flosnik’s performance declines: Mark—who met Miles in a theater—sounds much like the audio’s other men, while the voice given to Brooke, the 10-year-old who makes a final attempt at extricating Miles, is too similar to those of the book’s other children—all of them bright and high-pitched. Flosnik’s narration is, however, well paced and entertaining, and this—coupled with Smith’s playful language, rhymes, songs, and imaginative plot—will enchant listeners. A Pantheon hardcover.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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