The Room and the Chair
By Lorraine Adams
By Lorraine Adams
By Lorraine Adams
By Lorraine Adams
Part of Vintage Contemporaries
Category: Literary Fiction
Category: Literary Fiction
-
$15.00
Feb 08, 2011 | ISBN 9780307473370
-
Feb 09, 2010 | ISBN 9780307592866
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
Vietnam
Home Waters
The Destructive War
Scratching the Beat Surface
Narrow Dog to Indian River
Shakespeare Basics for Grown-Ups
A Biographical Guide to the Great Jazz and Pop Singers
The Unvanquished
Plato at the Googleplex
Praise
“Adams is a singular and important American writer. The Room and the Chair is remarkable for its ambitions and its achievements. . . . One of the triumphs of this book is that it’s a war novel that’s mostly about women. Though often unwitting tools and even more often thwarted, they are the fulcrum of the book, lifting what might otherwise be a dazzling thriller into the realm of literature.”
—Los Angeles Times Book Review
“Wonderful. . . . One of the most thrilling literary novels I’ve read in years. . . . Lorraine Adams seems to have it all—a journalist’s sharp eye, a poet’s ear, a cynic’s wisdom and a story-teller’s flourish. . . . . A tough, fast and beautiful read.”
—Colum McCann, National Book Award–winning author of Let the Great World Spin
“Spellbinding. . . . Fiercely intelligent. . . . A stunning portrayal of our uneasy days. . . . Sinuous and intricately plotted. . . . A breed apart: a novel that combines the meticulous reportage of Bernstein and Woodward’s All the President’s Men with the spellbinding poetry and creepy political intrigue of Robert Penn Warren’s All the King’s Men.”
—Chicago Tribune
“Engaging. . . . A Syriana-type yarn that tracks a dozen linked characters and shifts from the United States to the Islamic world and back again. . . . A wild and often fascinating ride.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“Adams is so smart about how official Washington works and, like Don DeLillo in Underworld, she is fascinated by how information conceals the world from us.”
—The Washington Post
“Intellectually challenging and artfully written, bursting with arresting imagery and cultural detail, and buzzing with the inner lives of its many characters. Ambitious in its intent as well as narrative structure.”
—The Boston Globe
“An ejection-seat view of the war on terror in the media age. . . . Adams’s page-turner maneuvers between cockpit and newsroom, the Potomac and the Panjshir Valley.”
—Vogue
“Masterly. . . . Forceful. . . . The West’s post-9/11 preference for information-boggle over truth-telling gets a blunt reckoning in The Room and the Chair . . . [It] mercilessly critiques our addiction to narratives of Western exceptionalism even as it compels us to turn its pages.”
—Bookforum
“Ambitious. . . . Cinematic. . . . [Offers] profound insights into how newspapers actually operate and stretches of dialogue that are as spare and pitch-perfect as anything written by Hemingway or Waugh.”
—San Francisco Chronicle
“Penetrating. . . . Provocative. . . . Adams’s The Room and the Chair is suspenseful and transporting—fine, many good novels are—but it is also that rarer thing: part of the conversation about our seemingly endless War on Terror. . . . Adams is a limber and inventive stylist, capable of great music and rhythm. . . . Exceptional.”
—The Daily Beast
“Poetic. . . . Innovative. . . . In the last few lines of the book, Adams upends the expectations she has so carefully nurtured throughout, providing a creepy and ambiguous denouement that concerns the fate of our heroine, to be sure, but also turns on the even more complicated question of a world’s meaning.”
—Harper’s Magazine
“What you see in [this] spy story is that same old, grand theme that Faulkner talked about: the human heart in conflict with itself.”
—Alan Cheuse, NPR’s “All Things Considered”
“Adams writes with precision and empathy of lives marginalized or discounted by the ambitions of superiors, by institutional imperatives and global ideologies. She understands the tragic scale of this vast struggle, and that every day, we are, all of us—from Washington to Bagram to Guantanamo—more vulnerable and less valuable, and closer to being counted as casualties of one kind or another. This book tallies that cost and does so in utterly human terms.”
—David Simon, creator and writer of The Wire
“A thriller with brains. . . . Reads like Top Gun meets All the President’s Men.”
—More Magazine
“Precise, lyrical. . . . An inside view of both the U. S. intelligence community and the newsroom floor, allowing Adams to explore how reality is created, warped, and disguised at the whims of those in power. . . . Vivid.”
—Salon
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Just for joining you’ll get personalized recommendations on your dashboard daily and features only for members.
Find Out More Join Now Sign In