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"Ward Just's thrillers are so subtle that they risk sounding dull, as though he's engaged in a battle against excess and bombast. The movement in his stories is slight, but the forces at work are tremendous. That muted power has never been more unsettling than in his new novel....Just makes no easy declarations in this often arduously analytical novel." Ron Charles, The Washington Post Book World (read the entire Washington Post Book World review)
Synopses & Reviews
Publisher Comments:
From one of our most critically acclaimed authors comes a masterly story of terrorism and revenge and one mans attempts to extricate himself from his past.
Thomas Railles, an American expatriate and former odd-jobber for the CIA, is a respected painter living with his beloved wife, Florette, in the south of France. On an ordinary autumn day, Florette goes for a walk in the hills and is killed by unknown assailants. Her death devastates Thomas, and in the weeks and months that follow he struggles to make sense of a world that seems defined by violence and pain.
Each night Thomas tracks the war in Iraq on the evening news while Florette's killers remain at large. When French officials detain four Moroccan terrorists and charge them with Florette's murder, Thomas is invited to witness the interrogation. The experience completely undoes him, changing his world utterly, and he finds himself unable to remain at a distance from America, the country he left so long ago.
Ward Just's most gripping and insightful novel yet, Forgetfulness is a haunting depiction of the corrosive effects of todays war on terror and its unexpected consequences for the individual conscience.
Review:
"Just has long observed the fault lines in human nature and a person's moral code. In his 15th novel (after the 2005 Pulitzer finalist, An Unfinished Season), Just, using an unlikely hero, sets his journalist's eye on the ethically fraught war on terror. Thomas Railles is a 65-year-old American expatriate portrait painter of moderate fame who lives with his French wife, Florette, in a Pyrenees village. When Florette goes for a solitary walk in the mountains and is killed by Moroccan terrorists, Railles blames himself for her death: two of his childhood friends now work in intelligence, and he has pulled several 'odd jobs' for them over the years, including one that may have inspired this belated 'payback.' When he eventually faces one of Florette's killers, Railles must decide whether to avenge her death or find a different peace of mind. 'Forgetfulness is the old man's friend,' he muses, but he is aware of the irony. The ethical questions of Just's tale add moral heft to an emotionally charged narrative. Author tour. (Sept. 6)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
Review:
"Ward Just's thrillers are so subtle that they risk sounding dull, as though he's engaged in a battle against excess and bombast. The movement in his stories is slight, but the forces at work are tremendous. That muted power has never been more unsettling than in his new novel, a response to Sept. 11 that stretches the boundaries of an already voluminous genre. Even his wistful title, 'Forgetfulness,'... Washington Post Book Review (read the entire Washington Post review) signals that Just is exploring something very different from what we find in John Updike's best-selling 'Terrorist.' This story takes place deep in the shadow of Sept. 11, but it contains neither the raw bitterness of Ken Kalfus' 'A Disorder Peculiar to the Country' nor the tender sadness of Jonathan Safran Foer's 'Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close.' Instead, Just tries to portray the state of mind Emily Dickinson described when she wrote, 'After great pain a formal feeling comes — / The nerves sit ceremonious like tombs.' Just divides his time between Martha's Vineyard and Paris, and that bifocal perspective informs this cool exploration of the battle between America and jihadist terror. The story takes place in St. Michel du Valcabrere, a quaint village near the Pyrenees Mountains, a setting far removed from geopolitical conflict. The opening chapter describes the final hours in the life of Florette DuFour, a 54-year-old woman who has broken her ankle during her regular Sunday walk along one of the solitary trails in the snow-topped mountains. We see her in the company of four strange men who carry her on a stretcher, but they make no attempt to communicate with her — or keep her from freezing to death. Her thoughts, punctuated by pain and anxiety, wander across her life, from her girlhood in St. Michel to earlier that afternoon when she left her husband and his friends talking in the living room. It's an extraordinary chapter (anthologizers, take note), deeply unnerving, apparently haphazard, but in fact brilliantly constructed to convey much about Thomas Railles, her devoted husband, his determination to keep her cradled in safety, and his conflicted relationship with America. The rest of the novel studies Thomas' reaction to the death of his beloved wife; he knows instinctively that his response will determine the nature of the rest of his life. Though Florette probably died of exposure, it's also clear that she was accompanied by — or captured by? — several people, one of whom slit her throat. The shaken villagers assume this atrocity is the work of Castille drug traffickers, but Thomas suspects a more terrifying explanation. A successful painter, he once worked for the CIA, doing minor surveillance jobs that blended effortlessly with his work as an artist. Could it be that despite his best efforts to remove himself from that world of intrigue, some offended party has struck down his wife in an act of long-delayed payback? Though he tries to discourage them, two old friends from the CIA insist on pursuing the murder investigation through back channels. Thomas would rather settle into the stunned silence of grief and remembrance. 'Desire in all forms had left him,' Just writes, 'and what he wanted now was to live quietly in a simple fashion, keep his own counsel, and find a means to begin painting again. ... He lacked anger of the sort that swept all before it and became a cause in itself, a way of life, the anger of the American ... after September 11.' But then, unexpectedly, he receives an invitation to witness the secret interrogation of the four Moroccan terrorists who killed his wife. What an awful test of a man's stoicism — and how carefully Just examines that challenge in these pages. Of course, a side of Thomas would like nothing more than to watch his wife's killers be tortured to death in the unmarked basement of some French warehouse. One of his old CIA friends, an ominous symbol of the new privatized security forces that profit from the war on terror, assures Thomas that observing the interrogation will 'bring closure,' but Thomas suspects that this promise is a cheat. He's revolted by the climate of 'revenge sweeping the nation ... the full fury of righteous American anger.' The interrogation scene, when it finally arrives, is another striking set piece. Though it seems to pass almost in real time and involves very little action or speech, it's propelled by a palpable sense of dread and the anticipation of violence. The lives of four horrible men hang in the balance, of course, but so does the conscience of one good man, and the combination is riveting. Just makes no easy declarations in this often arduously analytical novel. Listening to 'the evening news reporting casualties from Iraq ... the details, unchanging from one evening to the next,' Thomas knows that forgetfulness is not a reasonable response to assault, either personal or national. But he also knows the utter futility of vengeance. This is the paradox that wrenches him in this mature meditation on the personal, private grief that's cultivated in a global war on terror, the search for subtle moral truths in a climate of slogans and curses. Ron Charles is a senior editor of The Washington Post Book World." Reviewed by Ron Charles, Washington Post Book World (Copyright 2006 Washington Post Book World Service/Washington Post Writers Group) (hide most of this review)
Review:
"[A] riveting examination of personal loss and political criminality...Just's Forgetfulness is haunting, clarifying, and imperative." Booklist (Starred Review)
Review:
"Superb — as suspense, as theater, as psychological warfare...[Just] is as seductive a raconteur as ever." Kirkus Reviews
Review:
"A heartbreaking tale that is as contemporary as today's newspaper headlines and as timeless as the most profound classic tragedy." BookPage
Review:
"Many of our best writers...are grappling with 9/11 and its fall-out; Just's take may be the best yet. (Grade: A)" Entertainment Weekly
Review:
"Forgetfulness would have made a better novella....[T]he novel sags under too many digressions....[W]ell written, thoughtful, but without the moral urgency that fired the heart of the book." Christian Science Monitor
Review:
"Forgetfulness is a good, complicated story extremely well told....Just was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for his last book....Forgetfulness is a reminder of just how good he is." Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Review:
"Forgetfulness is a rich, complex book...Just's writing zips along, marred only occasionally by some didactic dialogue when he struggles to make his points. We need more novels like this..." Cleveland Plain Dealer
Synopsis:
Just's most gripping, insightful, and nuanced novel yet will haunt its readers and show the corrosive effects of today's war and its unexpected consequences for the individual conscience.
Synopsis:
Thomas Railles, an American expatriate and former odd-jobber” for the CIA, is a successful painter living with his beloved wife, Florette, in a small village in the Pyrenees. On an ordinary autumn day, Florette goes for a walk in the hills and is killed by unknown assailants. Was her death simply a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time, or was it somehow connected to Thomass work with the CIA? When French officials detain four Moroccan terrorists and charge them with Florettes murder, Thomas is invited by his boyhood friend (and former agency handler) Bernhard to witness the interrogation. Thomas's search for answers in this shadow world will lead him to a confrontation that will change him forever.
Ward Just is the author of fourteen previous novels, including the National book Award finalist Echo House and An Unfinished Season, winner of the Chicago Tribune's Heartland Award. In a career that began as a war correspondent for Newsweek and the Washington Post, Just has lived and written in half a dozen countries, including Britain, France, and Vietnam. His characters often lead public lives as politicians, civil servants, soldiers, artists, and writers. It is the tension between public duty and private conscience that animates much of his fiction, including Forgetfulness. Just and his wife, Sarah Catchpole, divide their time between Martha’s Vineyard and Paris.
Peter Anderson, February 10, 2007 (view all comments by Peter Anderson)
Wonderfully written and deeply insightful novel about one man confronting grief, vengeance and his past, by perhaps our most unappreciated great author.
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Product details
272 pages
Houghton Mifflin Company -
English9780618634637
Reviews:
"Publishers Weekly Review"
by Publishers Weekly,
"Just has long observed the fault lines in human nature and a person's moral code. In his 15th novel (after the 2005 Pulitzer finalist, An Unfinished Season), Just, using an unlikely hero, sets his journalist's eye on the ethically fraught war on terror. Thomas Railles is a 65-year-old American expatriate portrait painter of moderate fame who lives with his French wife, Florette, in a Pyrenees village. When Florette goes for a solitary walk in the mountains and is killed by Moroccan terrorists, Railles blames himself for her death: two of his childhood friends now work in intelligence, and he has pulled several 'odd jobs' for them over the years, including one that may have inspired this belated 'payback.' When he eventually faces one of Florette's killers, Railles must decide whether to avenge her death or find a different peace of mind. 'Forgetfulness is the old man's friend,' he muses, but he is aware of the irony. The ethical questions of Just's tale add moral heft to an emotionally charged narrative. Author tour. (Sept. 6)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
"Review A Day"
by Ron Charles, The Washington Post Book World,
"Ward Just's thrillers are so subtle that they risk sounding dull, as though he's engaged in a battle against excess and bombast. The movement in his stories is slight, but the forces at work are tremendous. That muted power has never been more unsettling than in his new novel....Just makes no easy declarations in this often arduously analytical novel." (read the entire Washington Post Book World review)
"Review"
by Booklist (Starred Review),
"[A] riveting examination of personal loss and political criminality...Just's Forgetfulness is haunting, clarifying, and imperative."
"Review"
by Kirkus Reviews,
"Superb — as suspense, as theater, as psychological warfare...[Just] is as seductive a raconteur as ever."
"Review"
by BookPage,
"A heartbreaking tale that is as contemporary as today's newspaper headlines and as timeless as the most profound classic tragedy."
"Review"
by Entertainment Weekly,
"Many of our best writers...are grappling with 9/11 and its fall-out; Just's take may be the best yet. (Grade: A)"
"Review"
by Christian Science Monitor,
"Forgetfulness would have made a better novella....[T]he novel sags under too many digressions....[W]ell written, thoughtful, but without the moral urgency that fired the heart of the book."
"Review"
by Milwaukee Journal Sentinel,
"Forgetfulness is a good, complicated story extremely well told....Just was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for his last book....Forgetfulness is a reminder of just how good he is."
"Review"
by Cleveland Plain Dealer,
"Forgetfulness is a rich, complex book...Just's writing zips along, marred only occasionally by some didactic dialogue when he struggles to make his points. We need more novels like this..."
"Synopsis"
by Ingram,
Just's most gripping, insightful, and nuanced novel yet will haunt its readers and show the corrosive effects of today's war and its unexpected consequences for the individual conscience.
"Synopsis"
by Firebrand,
Thomas Railles, an American expatriate and former odd-jobber” for the CIA, is a successful painter living with his beloved wife, Florette, in a small village in the Pyrenees. On an ordinary autumn day, Florette goes for a walk in the hills and is killed by unknown assailants. Was her death simply a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time, or was it somehow connected to Thomass work with the CIA? When French officials detain four Moroccan terrorists and charge them with Florettes murder, Thomas is invited by his boyhood friend (and former agency handler) Bernhard to witness the interrogation. Thomas's search for answers in this shadow world will lead him to a confrontation that will change him forever.
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