
Sorry to Disrupt the Peace
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Narrated by:
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Nancy Wu
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By:
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Patrick Cottrell
About this listen
Helen Moran is thirty-two years old, single, childless, college educated, and partially employed as a guardian of troubled young people in New York. She is accepting a furniture delivery in her shared studio apartment when her uncle calls to break the news: Helen’s adoptive brother is dead.
According to the Internet, there are six possible reasons why her brother might have killed himself. But Helen knows better: she knows that six reasons is only shorthand for “the abyss.” Helen also knows that she alone is qualified to launch a serious investigation into his death, so she purchases a one-way ticket to Milwaukee. There, as she searches her childhood home and attempts to uncover why someone would choose to die, she will face her estranged family, her brother’s few friends, and the overzealous grief counselor, Chad Lambo; she may also discover what it truly means to be alive.
A bleakly comic tour de force that’s by turns poignant, uproariously funny, and viscerally unsettling, this debut novel has shades of Bernhard, Beckett, and Bowles—and it announces the singular voice of Patrick Cottrell.
©2017 Patty Yumi Cottrell (P)2017 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...
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Performance
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Excellent!
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
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Both Funny & Heart Wrenching in the Perfect Ratio.
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I'll Be Seeing You
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- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Elizabeth Berg’s father was an Army veteran who was a tough man in every way but one: He showed a great deal of love and tenderness to his wife. Berg describes her parents’ marriage as a romance that lasted for nearly 70 years; she grew up watching her father kiss her mother upon leaving home, and kiss her again the instant he came back. His idea of when he should spend time away from her was never. But then her father developed Alzheimer’s disease, and her parents were forced to leave the home they loved and move into a facility that could offer them help.
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Honest vulnerable process of learning to love and let go
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By: Elizabeth Berg
I like that the narrator, a millennial, is such an individual, and doesn't care if people like her or not.
She is resentful about being a Korean adoptee, placed in a middle American west home, to parents who appear to have done nothing wrong but fail to educate their two adopted Korean kids about Asian culture.
Yet Helen is deeply altruistic, working with troubled young people and living like a pauper. Although, as she lives in New York, she is partly funded by an inheritance from her adoptive, racist grandfather.
Both Helen and her younger brother, whose suicide opens the book, appear to be on some kind of spectrum of asexuality and autism. Her quest through this book is to help her parents get through the funeral and find out why her brother chose to end his life.
Darkly funny, real, and in the end touching. Can't wait for more from this author.
Always Surprising
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Scatalogical, arrogant egotistical character thinks she is cool, but not...
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