-
Netherland (HarperPerennial) (Paperback)
$9.13 - Save $3.57 28% off - RRP $12.70 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 72 hours | |- Also available in...
- CD-Audio $28.64
Short Description for NetherlandIn early 2006, Chuck Ramkissoon is found dead at the bottom of a New York canal.
Full description- Publisher: HarperPerennial
- Published: 01 February 2009
- Format: Paperback 300 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Contemporary Fiction
- ISBN 13: 9780007275700 ISBN 10: 0007275706
- Sales rank: 10,240
Other books
Full description for Netherland
In early 2006, Chuck Ramkissoon is found dead at the bottom of a New York canal. In London, a Dutch banker named Hans van den Broek hears the news, and remembers his unlikely friendship with Chuck and the off-kilter New York in which it flourished: the New York of 9/11, the powercut and the Iraq war. Those years were difficult for Hans -- his English wife Rachel left with their son after the attack, as if that event revealed the cracks and silences in their marriage, and he spent two strange years in New York's Chelsea Hotel, passing stranger evenings with the eccentric residents. Lost in a country he'd regarded as his new home, Hans sought comfort in a most alien place -- the thriving but almost invisible world of New York cricket, in which immigrants from Asia and the West Indies play a beautiful, mystifying game on the city's most marginal parks. It was during these games that Hans befriends Chuck Ramkissoon, who dreamed of establishing the city's first proper cricket field. Over the course of a summer, Hans grew to share Chuck's dream and Chuck's sense of American possibility -- until he began to glimpse the darker meaning of his new friend's activities and ambitions.' Netherland' is a novel of belonging and not belonging, and the uneasy state in between. It is a novel of a marriage foundering and recuperating, and of the shallows and depths of male friendship. With it, Joseph O'Neill has taken the anxieties and uncertainties of our new century and fashioned a work of extraordinary beauty and brilliance.

