![]() ![]() Union Atlantic was a more overtly topical story set in the corrupt banking and military world of the US after 9/11, told in rougher prose. This is the second novel by the prizewinning American writer Adam Haslett. Life illuminated in this way becomes so intense that a man about to kill himself can rejoice in the precariousness of existence: “How narrowly we all avoid having never been.” All the characters are wordsmiths, who enjoy the sentences they create and have some belief that to find the right words to describe pain is to make it more bearable. The beauty is the magnificence of nature, love and perhaps most of all art: music, with its power to still unhappiness by reaching “the note that the heart pines for”, and language. The pain is the grief of loss, past and future, and the ordeal of daily life for those unable to imbue it with meaning. ![]() R epeatedly in Imagine Me Gone, troubled characters ask themselves how life can be at once so beautiful and so painful. ![]()
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