Synopses & Reviews
Now in paperback, David Whitehouse’s “ingenious” (The New York Times), “deeply affecting” (People) and award-winning debut novel about two brothers, obesity, celebrity, and the redemptive power of love.Mal Ede, a child of untamed manners and unbounded curiosity, is the eccentric eldest son of an otherwise typical middle-class family. But as the wonders of childhood fade into the responsibilities of adulthood, Mal’s spirits fade too. On his twenty-fifth birthday, disillusioned, Mal goes to bed—back to his childhood bed—and never emerges again.
What follows is a metamorphosis of extreme proportions: immobility and a gargantuan appetite combine, over the course of two decades, to make Mal the fattest man in the world. Despite his seclusion, Mal’s condition earns him worldwide notoriety and a cult of followers convinced he is making an important statement about modern life. But as these followers elevate Mal to the role of unlikely hero, his actions will also change the lives of his haunted parents; his dutiful brother, our narrator; and the woman they both love, Lou.
In Bed, David Whitehouse has put a magnifying glass on contemporary society. Published in more than a dozen countries around the world, this “momentous” (The Bookseller) debut has been hailed as “a kind of suburban equivalent of Wuthering Heights” and its author as “the next Martin Amis” (Maclean’s).
Review
“Outlandishly clever description… Ingenious one-liners… There’s no question that [David Whitehouse] is a writer to watch.”--Janet Maslin, New York Times
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“A gorgeous, heartrending book, a book full of sentences so apt and well wrought, I sometimes had to read them twice.”--Henry Alford, San Francisco Chronicle
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“Gorgeous writing… A deceptively effortless, haunting first novel.”--Boston Globe
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“David Whitehouse has taken what might be a gimmicky hook in a lesser writer's hands--a romance triangulating around a bedridden media spectacle, the world's most obese man--and turned it, through lapidary prose, into a soulful meditation on a fraternal love as singular as it is universal.”--Teddy Wayne, author of Kapitoil
Review
"Bed is a deftly-told wonder. Mr. Whitehouse's writing is accomplished, poetic, and deeply affecting."—Joe Meno, author of Hairstyles of the Damned
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“Staggering, inventive, and heartbreakingly beautiful.”—Esquire (UK)
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“The best new novel I’ve read in ages.” —Sam Delaney, Guardian
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"Sad and funny and pretty brilliant, too."--The Observer (UK)
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"Masterful... [An] accomplished debut... [Whitehouse] maintains a tone of subtlety and grace, pulling a distinguished and accessible story out of a profoundly strange experience."--Publishers Weekly, starred review ("Pick of the Week")
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“A totally extraordinary and original novel.”—Heat (UK)
Synopsis
Now in paperback, David Whitehouse's "ingenious" (The New York Times), "deeply affecting" (People) and award-winning debut novel about two brothers, obesity, celebrity, and the redemptive power of love.
Mal Ede, a child of untamed manners and unbounded curiosity, is the eccentric eldest son of an otherwise typical middle-class family. But as the wonders of childhood fade into the responsibilities of adulthood, Mal's spirits fade too. On his twenty-fifth birthday, disillusioned, Mal goes to bed--back to his childhood bed--and never emerges again.
Over the course of two decades, immobility and a gargantuan appetite combine to make Mal the fattest man in the world. Despite his seclusion, Mal's condition earns him worldwide notoriety and a cult of followers convinced he is making an important statement about modern life. But his actions will also change the lives of his haunted parents, his brother and the woman they both love, Lou.
Upon Bed's publication, Kirkus Reviews declared, "Once in a great while a book will emerge from nowhere to acclaim." In Bed, David Whitehouse has put a magnifying glass on contemporary society. The result--a parable about mortality, obesity, celebrity, depression and the broken promises of adulthood-- is "as soulful as it is funny" (The Guardian).
Synopsis
Mal Ede, a child of untamed manners and unbounded curiosity, is the eccentric eldest son of an otherwise typical middle-class family. But as the wonders of childhood fade into the responsibilities of adulthood, Mal’s spirits fade too. On his twenty-fifth birthday, disillusioned, Mal goes to bed—back to his childhood bed—and never emerges again.
Over the course of two decades, immobility and a gargantuan appetite combine to make Mal the fattest man in the world. Despite his seclusion, Mal’s condition earns him worldwide notoriety and a cult of followers convinced he is making an important statement about modern life. But his actions will also change the lives of his haunted parents, his brother and the woman they both love, Lou.
Upon Bed’s publication, Kirkus Reviews declared, “Once in a great while a book will emerge from nowhere to acclaim.” In Bed, David Whitehouse has put a magnifying glass on contemporary society. The result—a parable about mortality, obesity, celebrity, depression and the broken promises of adulthood— is “as soulful as it is funny” (The Guardian).
About the Author
DAVID WHITEHOUSE was born in 1981 in Nuneaton, England. An award-winning journalist, his work has appeared in the Guardian, the Sunday Times, the Independent, Esquire UK, and the Observer Magazine. He is currently an editor at the British magazine Heat. His first short film, The Archivist, produced by Warp Films and the BBC, is screening at film festivals worldwide. Whitehouse’s debut novel Bed was the winner of the inaugural Tell Hell with Prizes Award at the 2010 London Book Fair. Whitehouse lives in London.