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   Summary and Book Reviews

A Better Angel: Summary and book reviews of A Better Angel by Chris Adrian, plus links to an excerpt from A Better Angel and a biography of Chris Adrian.

A Better Angel A Better Angel
Stories
by Chris Adrian
Hardcover: Aug 2008,
240 pages.
Paperback: Jul 2009,
304 pages.

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Book Summary

The stories in A Better Angel describe the terrain of human suffering—illness, regret, mourning, sympathy—in the most unusual of ways. In “Stab,” a bereaved twin starts a friendship with a homicidal fifth grader in the hope that she can somehow lead him back to his dead brother. A ne'er-do-well pediatrician returns home to take care of his dying father in the remarkable title story, all the while under the scrutiny of an easily disappointed heavenly agent. In “The Colony,” a young doctor travels to a remote island to study a mind-destroying illness and finds himself the victim of a transfiguring sympathy for the afflicted. And in “Why Antichrist?,” a boy tries to contact the spirit of his dead father and finds himself talking to the Devil instead. Such miraculous and chilling events are not uncommon in Chris Adrian's world, which is by turns heartbreaking, magical, and darkly comic.

With Gob's Grief and The Children's Hospital, Adrian announced himself as a writer of rare talent and originality. The stories in A Better Angel, some of which have appeared in The New Yorker, Tin House, and McSweeney's, demonstrate more of his endless inventiveness and wit, and they confirm his growing reputation as a most exciting and unusual literary voice.

Book Reviews

BookBrowse - Amy Reading
A Better Angel is a spiritual book that is noteworthy for what it lacks. There are no gods or saviors here, only a few angels and one very reluctant antichrist. The characters are inhabited or visited by entities they do not understand and who rarely strike them as divine. The people of Adrian's stories seem determined to live ordinary secular lives, despite the miracles that erupt into the everyday, as when a nineteenth-century farmboy begins seeing visions of people plummeting from a skyscraper. They don't want to know that the world contains more than three dimensions, in part because the veil that shields us from such realms only flutters aside when there is suffering.
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 Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. With heartbreaking imagination, Adrian illuminates how people act out their grief on their own bodies and the bodies of others, and enter the world of the spirit in the process.

 Kirkus Reviews
Abrasive, accusatory, despairing and, more than often enough, quite unforgettable fiction.

 Booklist
Starred Review. The moment you feel as if you've discovered the meaning in his words, it slips between your fingers and leaves you unsettled, unmoored, and unmistakably impressed.

 Entertainment Weekly - Jennifer Reese
His less successful tales — and unfortunately there are more of these — tend to be overly hectic, struggling for transcendent effect. B-

 Los Angles Times - Lizzie Skurnick
You can't deny that Adrian's prose is lovely, and if his characters' consciousness rarely fits the role he's chosen for them, a real heart lies beneath. That's the stuff Adrian needs to find pumping -- in stories where they can live as themselves, not as jerky zombies rattling around the haunted houses of the soul.

 Elle
Adrian's handling of 9/11 in several stories captures his strongest suits: an instinctive mistrust of the glib and easy, and an insistent undertow pulling toward greater depths.


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