Life Drawing Audiobook By Robin Black cover art

Life Drawing

A Novel

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Life Drawing

By: Robin Black
Narrated by: Cassandra Campbell
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About this listen

NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY NPR

“Taut, elegant . . . Black is a writer of great wisdom.”—Claire Messud, The Guardian (UK)

Augusta Edelman—Gus to her friends—is a painter, a wife, and not always the best judge of her own choices—one of them bad enough that she and her husband, Owen, have fled their longtime city home and its reminders of troubling events. Now, three years into their secluded country life, Gus works daily on the marriage she nearly lost, discovers new inspiration for her art, and contemplates the mysteries of a childhood tragedy. But this quiet, healing rhythm is forever shattered one hot July day when a stranger moves into the abandoned house next door and crosses more boundaries than just those between their lands.

A fierce, honest, and moving portrait of a woman grappling with her fate, Life Drawing is a debut novel as beautiful and unsparing as the human heart.

©2014 Robin Black (P)2014 Random House Audio
Fiction Literary Fiction Psychological Sagas Marriage Heartfelt Suspense Life Drawing
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Critic reviews

“The simple facts—Gus’s relationship with Owen, her love affair with Bill—are, of course, not simple. [Robin] Black is a writer of great wisdom, and illuminates, without undue emphasis, the flickering complexity of individual histories. . . . The atmosphere of their love, of this house, is one of the most powerful aspects of Black’s unsettling and compelling novel. . . . [Her] taut, elegant prose is both effective and affecting. . . . Life Drawing is at once quiet and memorable. This makes it far from fashionable, and all the more to be applauded. Its author pursues real and vital questions. Astringent and wise, Black is not afraid to discomfit her readers. This novel, like life, is uneasy: what a relief.”—Claire Messud, The Guardian (UK)

“The page-turning suspense of Robin Black’s novel comes from her beautiful, honest portrait of a marriage, of a life. . . . A novel of consequence, and a stunning one.”—San Francisco Chronicle

“Gripping . . . The power of this story is how it illuminates, in utterly compelling detail, the complex give-and-take of a couple trying to save their marriage once betrayal has entered the picture.”—O: The Oprah Magazine

What listeners say about Life Drawing

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Excellent !

A slow build, the narrative establishing the characters and touching on so many aspects of life - relationships, friendship, truth, betrayal, parenting, art, and loss. The prose is lovely, and Cassandra Campbell, one of my favorite narrators, reads this beautifully. An emotional story and a truely surprise ending (I definitely did not see it coming)

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2 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

well written but (spoiler alert) quite a downer

if you are looking for action and variety this is not the book for you...i felt that it ended on a very very dark note and i think if i had known i would not have chosen to read it...

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Made me wonder for days.

Where does Life Drawing rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?

It's definitely among the top 20 books.

Who was your favorite character and why?

Augusta is definitely my favorite given the layers she has. The complexity of her character really hooked me in.

What about Cassandra Campbell’s performance did you like?

Cassandra has really captured the voices of the carious characters.

If you could take any character from Life Drawing out to dinner, who would it be and why?

It would be Owen. I'd really like to know what was he thinking when he decided to give his marriage a second chance and a third chance. I want to know if he was really brave or a coward to give Augusta so many chances.

Any additional comments?

Got me really thinking:

"That's what happens when one of you dies. The clock stops. The story ends. (You) begin to see patterns. Begin to understand. Maybe the patterns are only the ones that you impose. But the thing takes on a different shape. It takes on a shape. Or, as one of my teachers used to say, you cannot see the landscape you’re in."

"There are often two conversations going on in a marriage. The one that you’re having and the one you’re not, sometimes you don't even know when that second, silent one has begun."

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Elegant prose, honest reflection on marriage

Within the first lines of Life Drawing, Robin Black's stunning debut novel, we learn that the narrator's husband, Owen, has died, although we still don't know the details of how this happened.

This is one of those novels that although provides great suspense and engages the reader's curiosity from the beginning, it's not so much about guessing the outcome as much as it is about how the story and its characters develop.

As Gus begins narrating their story, the couple's relationship have apparently survived an extra-marital affair in which she was the guilty party. Right after the affair ended, she decided to take the honest approach and confessed the whole thing to Owen.

Owen is a 51 year-old writer and Gus is a 47 year-old painter, they have accomplished a moderate level of success on their respective careers, good enough to provide a comfortable middle class life style.

Eventually and after receiving an unexpected inheritance, the couple retreats from their cosmopolitan life in the city and decide to buy a secluded 1918 farmhouse in Pennsylvania. On the surface it looks that Gus and Owen have found "safety in their solitude". The seclusion would theoretically serve a dual purpose, help them heal but also provide a idyllic, sheltered place where their creativity can flourish.

But there are certain dynamics that drive a relationship, some of them are openly acknowledged and recognized by the partners some of them are not. And underneath their seemingly perfect life, there are many pending issues that haven't been resolved and threaten their relationship.

Enter Alison Hemmings, a pretty and charming English divorcee who has just moved to the rental house nearby. After initially resisting Alison's intrusion into their very private lives, Gus and Alison become good friends and eventually Gus tells Alison the details of her affair with a married man.

By the time Nora, Alison's 20 year-old daughter comes to visit and develops a mayor infatuation for Owen, you have a strong feeling that something ominous is going to happen and in fact it all pretty much goes down hill from there. Nora's presence threatens to open old wounds between Owen and Gus and it ultimately exposes all the baggage their relationship has been painfully carrying.

Life Drawing is a wonderful character novel that explores the complexities of marriage, the consequences of adultery and betrayal, women's friendships and in general the nuances of human relationships. And yet with all these serious themes it's a truly delightful read.

Casandra Campbell's narration was wonderful. She seamlessly delivers the virtues and flaws of all these characters in a pitch perfect performance.

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3 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Very annoying characters

Maybe I shouldn't have ordered this book because I don't care much for domestic dramas but the art aspect appealed to me. The parts of the book about art were in fact very good.
I'm not a reader who necessarily has to like the characters in a book, but these characters were simply annoying. The narrator is extremely egocentric and the other characters are not much better. Also, on approximately every other page someone is apologizing about something.

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1 person found this helpful

  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    2 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    4 out of 5 stars

Interesting Story but Bad Narration

This book would have been better with a different narrator. Cassandra Campbell only uses two emotions—overdone irony or a sort of dry ennui (plus a bad English accent) for three-quarters of the story. It became so tiresome that I sped up the narration in order to spend less time on her interpretation of the characters’ world-weariness. I will try to avoid this narrator in future.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Put me to sleep.

Any additional comments?

The narrator's voice was nice, but the story seemed to drone on and on with too much introspection from the main character. If found myself getting sleepy while listening to it in the car. I felt that it was well written; just not my cup of tea.

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1 person found this helpful

  • Overall
    1 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars

Sketch in Black & White: no love lost

If you like existential writing, you may be in for a treat. I was not familiar with this author, but based on the sample, ratings and review, I anticipated an artistic story read by a favorite narrator, Cassandra Campbell.
However, the characters were uninteresting, flat, and devoid of true compassion. Though they were perpetually on the verge of a real experience, this never occurred. They lived life disconnected from each other, the truth, themselves, and the outside world. I got the sense that the author wrote the book while clinically depressed.
Or perhaps this is how the book was meant to feel, and I failed to appreciate the gray, cold existentialism.
I will need to return this one.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

A bit too Franzenish for my tastes

Cassandra Campbell’s narration was really well done with different accents and every character had a different voice. Although I disliked the story itself Campbell’s narration was the only thing that kept me listening.

This book was not my cup of tea. All the characters are selfish uppity people, who I would never want to know. These people were so unlikeable the only reason I finished this book was for the narration.

I’m not going to go on and on about how much I disliked this book and was bored to tears most of the time. It was a bit too Franzenish for my tastes. I know I am in the minority here but, ugh.

2 star book
4 star narration

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