Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: Leaving the Atocha Station

Author: Ben Lerner
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 1.9
Genres/categories: Fiction, Award winners, Poetry, Travel
Culture: Spain

Purchase/research links:

ISBN:
9781566892742
1566892740
Winner of the Believer Book Award in 2012.

Adam Gordon is a brilliant, if highly unreliable, young American poet on a prestigious fellowship in Madrid, struggling to establish his sense of self and his relationship to art. What is actual when our experiences are mediated by language, technology, medication, and the arts? Is poetry an essential art form, or merely a screen for the reader's projections? Instead of following the dictates of his fellowship, Adam's "research" becomes a meditation on the possibility of the genuine in the arts and beyond: are his relationships with the people he meets in Spain as fraudulent as he fears his poems are? A witness to the 2004 Madrid train bombings and their aftermath, does he participate in historic events or merely watch them pass him by?

In prose that veers between the comic and tragic, the self-contemptuous and the inspired, Leaving the Atocha Station is a portrait of the artist as a young man in an age of Google searches, pharmaceuticals, and spectacle.
Similar books:

Landlocked
by Doris Lessing

The Name of the World
by Denis Johnson

The Last Thing He Wanted
by Joan Didion

Strong Medicine
by Arthur Hailey

The Tattooed Girl
by Joyce Carol Oates

I'll Take You There
by Joyce Carol Oates

Fraud
by Anita Brookner

The Stars at Noon
by Denis Johnson

Vital Parts
by Thomas Berger

The Origin of the Brunists
by Robert Coover

Undue Influence
by Anita Brookner

The Picturegoers
by David Lodge

Climbers
by M. John Harrison

Where the Sea Used to Be
by Rick Bass

Return to Peyton Place
by Grace Metalious

10:04
by Ben Lerner

The Topeka School
by Ben Lerner

New and Selected Poems: Volume One
by Mary Oliver

On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous
by Ocean Vuong

Mutant Message Down Under
by Marlo Morgan