by Scarlett Thomas (Author)
Can a story save your life?
Meg Carpenter is broke. Her novel is years overdue. Her cell phone is out of minutes. And her moody boyfriend's only contribution to the household is his sour attitude. So she jumps at the chance to review a pseudoscientific book that promises life everlasting.
But who wants to live forever?
Consulting cosmology and physics, tarot cards, koans (and riddles and jokes), new-age theories of everything, narrative theory, Nietzsche, Baudrillard, and knitting patterns, Meg wends her way through
Our Tragic Universe, asking this and many other questions. Does she believe in fairies? In magic? Is she a superbeing? Is she living a storyless story? And what's the connection between her off-hand suggestion to push a car into a river, a ship in a bottle, a mysterious beast loose on the moor, and the controversial author of
The Science of Living Forever?
Smart, entrancing, and boiling over with Thomas's trademark big ideas,
Our Tragic Universe is a book about how relationships are created and destroyed, how we can rewrite our futures (if not our histories), and how stories just might save our lives.
Back Jacket
Can a story save your life?
"Thomas s prose is so addictive you can t help but fall deeper and deeper under her spell." Douglas Coupland "Thomas brilliantly reminds us that, despite popular representations, many women are actually staying up half the night talking ideas. One feels alone. And then one reads
Our Tragic Universe." Jincy Willett, author of
Winner of the National Book Award"A delight." Philip Pullman Meg Carpenter is broke. Her novel is years overdue. So when a book called
The Science of Living Forever lands on her desk, she jumps at the chance to review it, starting on a labyrinthine journey that takes her from mysterious beasts of the moor to forest fairies to ships-in-bottles, New Age theories of everything to physics to narrative theory, and forces her to ask: Does anyone really want to live forever?
Our Tragic Universe finds connections where we didn t know they existed, breaks down conventions that keep us from our destinies, and shows how we just might be able to rewrite our futures.Scarlett Thomas is the author of the critically acclaimed
The End of Mr. Y and
PopCo. She was named one of the twenty best young British writers by the
Independent on Sunday, one of the Telegraph s 20 Best Writers Under 40, and Writer of the Year at the 2002
Elle Style Awards. "
Number of Pages: 384
Dimensions: 1 x 7.9 x 5.2 IN
Illustrated: Yes
Publication Date: May 12, 2011