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by Lawrence Douglas (Author)
Meet Daniel Wellington: art historian, academic star, devoted husband, and total basket case. Although Daniel has known nothing but success, he's convinced the future promises nothing but disaster. When his wife, known simply as R., presents him with a tiny, size-XXS Yale sweatshirt, Daniel is seized by the impulse to bolt; the specter of imminent fatherhood sends him into a full-blown existential crisis. Soon this well-intentioned young professor finds himself plotting bigamy, lying about his past, imagining his pregnant wife in the arms of an androgynous grad student, and explaining to the dean his obscene e-mail to the lead in a student production of Miss Julie.
TheCatastrophisttempers its rollicking downward spiral with expert pacing and regular flashes of atmospheric brilliance. The Forward Meet Daniel Wellington: art historian, academic star, devoted husband, and total basket case. When his wife, known simply as R., presents him with a tiny, size-XXS Yale sweatshirt, the specter of fatherhood sends Daniel into a full-blown existential crisis. Soon this well-intentioned young professor finds himself plotting bigamy, lying about his past, imagining his pregnant wife in the arms of an androgynous grad student, and explaining to the dean his obscene e-mail to a flirtatious former student. Razor sharp and riotously funny, The Catastrophist charts the rise, fall, and partial rebound of an ambivalent but endearing Everyman. "The book's descriptions are both punchy and zany, its dialogue funny and smart. And Daniel's observations can be as rueful as they are accurate . . . Brainy comedy." The Seattle Times"That we enjoy the company of this walking disaster is a tribute to Douglas s witty prose; that we love R. practical, attentive, and shrewd can be chalked up to the author s bedrock understanding of what constitutes an appealing human being." Entertainment Weekly LAWRENCE DOUGLAS s writing has appeared in the New York Times Book Review, the Hudson Review, McSweeney s, and the New Yorker, and he is a regular contributor to the Chronicle of Higher Education and the Times Literary Supplement. He teaches at Amherst College and lives in Boston."
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