Now It's Time to Say Goodbye
Written by Dale Peck
Narrated by Andrew Eiden, Angelo Di Loreto, Adenrele Ojo and
4/5
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About this audiobook
“An utterly gripping thriller . . . and a highly sophisticated piece of literary legerdemain” from the Lambda Award–winning author of Night Soil (The New York Times).
When the five hundreth person they know dies of AIDS, Colin and Justin flee New York City. They end up in Galatia, a Kansas town founded by freed slaves in the wake of the Civil War whose population is now divided, evenly but uneasily, between African Americans descended from the town’s founders and Caucasians who buy up more of the town’s land with each passing year. But within weeks of relocating, they are implicated in a harrowing crime, and discover that they can’t outrun their own tortured history, nor that of their new home. An encompassing, visionary, many-threaded work, Now It’s Time to Say Goodbye is an American novel of great scope and nearly mythological intensity.
This is the third volume of Gospel Harmonies, a series of seven stand-alone books that follow the character of John in various guises as he attempts to navigate the uneasy relationship between the self and the postmodern world.
“[A] fascinating melodrama of sexual and racial confusion, conflict, and injustice.” —Kirkus Reviews
“[Filled] with an emotional vengeance, dramatic breadth and observant fervency that brings his every gift to fruition.” —Los Angeles Times Sunday Book Review
“It is horrifying and funny and then too funny to be horrifying, or too horrifying to amuse. It is fiercely compelling and profoundly unpleasant. It is a virtuoso technical exercise that is also soul-music.” —The Boston Globe
Dale Peck
Dale Peck is the author of twelve books in a variety of genres, including Martin and John, Hatchet Jobs, and Sprout. His fiction and criticism have earned him two O. Henry Awards, a Pushcart Prize, a Lambda Literary Award, and a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship. He lives in New York City, where he teaches in the New School’s Graduate Writing Program.
More audiobooks from Dale Peck
Night Soil Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Martin and John Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Drift House: The First Voyage Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Garden of Lost and Found Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5What Burns Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Greenville Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Law of Enclosures Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Visions and Revisions: Coming of Age in the Age of AIDs Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Now It's Time to Say Goodbye
23 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This book contains the following: 1. Several very different, deeply different, deeply imagined characters (complete with distinct concerns, flaws, unspoken fears, and, most importantly, unspoken loves). 2. Two names for everything that matters. (Note: If you're in the first ten to twenty pages, it is okay to be confused about the name of the town. Black people call it Galatia, while white people call it Galatea. Yes, you can assume that the individuals in charge of each part of the town - a minister in Galatia and a banker/developer in Galatea - treat the towns exactly as you would expect from those two meaning-crammed names.) 3. Polarities, with realistically accompanying strong feelings between people at opposing poles and about people who don't stay on one side or the other (Galatia/Galatea; gay/straight; black/white; educated/not; wealthy/not; etc). 4. Two novels within the novel, but they don't appear in the text, as the stories-within-stories have in Peck's previous novels - and they do affect the characters during the story, a lot. 5. Booze and despair. 6. Explosions, all types. 7. Escape attempts, from despair, poverty, bad memories, small-town-ish-ness, limited dating pools, and one of two very powerful people who are themselves polar, but not as opposite as they want to believe.This book also contains the following:1. More loose ends than "Lost" and "The X-Files" combined, though nothing supernatural.2. Some gut-wrenching violence; not for the delicate reader.3. Some really florid writing, though most of them turn up in passages told from the first-person viewpoint of someone who is the right age to be florid, which makes them less annoying.4. More themes than seem to fit in the text. Rumor has it that the original book was over 1,000 pages - maybe some of the connective tissue ended up cut?5. An overarching air of futility; only one character leaves the story with anything resembling hope, though a few others get away with possibility.6. A cruelly accurate depiction of how people mythologize, how they make themselves out to be justified, what they leave out and what they leave in, and where they put things they leave out, e.g., a hidden diary, the ruins of a continuously smoldering town, a limestone cave that used to contain weird rocks, file drawers, a tree stump with a trap door on top, and in pictures hanging in plain sight.7. Conspicuous authorial ambition.I would not not recommend this book to fans of the Southern Gothic. I would not not recommend it to people who like puzzle rings and aren't turned off by rated-R elements. I would point to passages in order to demonstrate useful tips about to pull off multiple narrators, and I would cite the absence of certain passages as a good use of absence to tell more of the story.I'm not going to go out and find the author's other works myself, because I have a nagging feeling that the author may reasonably have infused the characters of Colin and Justin with autobiographical life but may not have realized how perilously close to Rosemary and the Reverend he himself walks when he tries to pack small-j justice, massive cultural dilemmas, a baroque flourish of conspicuous symbolism, and too many voices speaking from too many places along the plotline (don't expect sections 5-7 to use chronological order, or even necessarily chronological cues) into one book.You can build a novel with all the parts of a perfect novel, Mr. Peck, and you can animate it with your own breath, but the more complex the creature you are trying to build, the more difficult it is to make it self-sustaining, vital, meaningful to a wide audience. Myra saw, after all, how the parts of the novel's human Galatea's past never fit back together into a whole. Perhaps you did too, and your editor didn't; or perhaps you, like Colin, took the bag of cut words and flung them back.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Although there were elements of this book I really didn't like, there was so much, much more that I loved. Wonderful characterisation, raw emotion, unusual storytelling and different perspectives. There were some questions left unanswered at the end, but also some that had initially seemed important, but became irrelevent. I think that this is a book that improves even more on second and third reads.