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Hardcover Back from the Dead Book

ISBN: 0679451277

ISBN13: 9780679451273

Back from the Dead

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

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Book Overview

Chris Petit's debut novel, The Psalm Killer, published in 1997, garnered unanimous high praise (It provides the joy of discovering a major new writer. -- Philadelphia Inquirer). Now Petit brings that... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Love to Love You, Leah

McMahon, an aging rock star finds himself with an inexplicable problem. Years ago, a young woman, nanny to his friends child, died accidentally while the band was in France. Now, suddenly, he is receiving letters from her. Letters full of intimate details and knowledge. Letters which are beginning to threaten his own sanity. McMahon hires Beau Youselli, a moonlighting police detective, to solve the mystery. But the past is not to be dealt with so lightly.Youselli is the perfect antihero. Shallow, in the middle of a divorce, and not quite able to control either his violence or his lust, he provides a chilling counterpoint to the other characters in the book. All of who seem to play equal parts as victims and victimizers. For Youselli, there is no truth, only things to take advantage of as he picks away at threads that seem to go every which way. He despises McMahon, is turned on by women whose lives have become meaningless and boring, and is hopelessly drawn to the writer of the letters.The plot of the story is simple; one pastiche after another of Youselli's almost furtive attempts to find the reality of Leah, the dead letter writer. What he finds is layer after layer of misdirection and deception. The truth is so ephemeral and elusive that the detective's own identity seems to take damage as the story unfolds. Interspersed with these pastiches are the letters themselves, a series of interior monologues from McMahon, and pieces of the story of Edith, an older psychologist Youselli first uses as a resource and then turns into a lover.If anomie, the sense of disassociation, were to be made into a mystery novel, "Back From the Dead" would be it. Youselli's almost psychotic detachment from the violence he receives and enacts, coupled with his obsessive quest for someone who, if she exists at all would not be for him, provide the impetus for a series of events that only resolve themselves by happenstance. McMahon's friends, the participants in the accident are all somehow broken or flawed. They move with a jerky mechanical rhythm which hypnotizes the reader. Despite the title, there is no hope of rebirth, of redemption here.I am not sure how I feel about this book, whether it is a novel or a mystery story, or whether it succeeds or not. Chris Petit is an ingenious author, lending credibility to the outlandish, working multi-layered themes, and even using confusion as a plot device. But I found the literary nature of the book almost distracting. We are not used to having to think as much as Petit requires in order to absorb his efforts. I have to give credit where credit is due, the book is well written, atmospheric and chilling. I will remember more of the story than several I have read recently. But it is not a novel that I would care to reread anytime soon.

Great mystery

Once a rock and roll icon, but now more a golden oldie, McMahon begins receiving a letter a week signed by a woman dead for well over a decade. When the missives start to turn uglier and threatening, McMahon hires disillusioned New York City police detective Youselli to investigate the source and why. The rock idol informs Youselli that Leah baby-sat for the child of a now dead band member, but died in Paris fifteen years ago. Youselli begins questioning those close to McMahon and quickly realizes that his employer has not been totally truthful with his information. Soon Youselli becomes obsessed with the investigation and wonders if Leah actually still lives. His own life in emotional shamble, Youselli begins to live through the weekly letter even as he seeks the truth. BACK FROM THE DEAD is at times an engaging mystery due to its fascinating but gloomy characters that readers will actually detest. However, the story line takes too long to develop and will lose those in the audience whom prefer a faster pace. Chris Petit shows flashes of a top talent, especially with the cast and their dialogue, but needs to tighten the plot so that the reader will not feel like they hit the wall of a marathon.Harriet Klausner
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