

Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to France.
Falling Man is a magnificent, essential novel about the event that defines turn-of-the-century America. It begins in the smoke and ash of the burning towers and tracks the aftermath of this global tremor in the intimate lives of a few people. There is September 11 and then there are the days after—and the years. Falling Man is a magnificent, essential novel about the event that defines turn-of-the-century America. It begins in the smoke and ash of the burning towers and tracks the aftermath of this global tremor in the intimate lives of a few people. First there is Keith, walking out of the rubble into a life that he’d always imagined belonged to everyone but him. Then Lianne, his estranged wife, memory-haunted, trying to reconcile two versions of the same shadowy man. And their small son Justin, standing at the window, scanning the sky for more planes. These are lives choreographed by loss, grief, and the enormous force of history. Brave and brilliant, Falling Man traces the way the events of September 11 have reconfigured our emotional landscape, our memory, and our perception of the world. It is cathartic, beautiful, and heartbreaking.
| Asin | 1416546065 |
| Dimensions | 5.25 x 0.7 x 8 inches |
| Edition | First Scribner Trade Paperback Edition |
| Isbn 10 | 9781416546061 |
| Isbn 13 | 978-1416546061 |
| Item Weight | 7.7 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Part Of Series | Klett Lektürehilfen |
| Print Length | 272 pages |
| Publication Date | June 3, 2008 |
| Publisher | Scribner |
User
A book to clutch as a generation free-falls post-9/11
Through the twisted wreckage of buildings, politics and lives, Don DeLillo architects a grand design on most hallowed ground. The "Falling Man" is DeLillo's vivid personalization of the horrific events of 9/11 and its aftermath. The book reveals the human dramas of that great tragedy through juxtaposing emotions: the fear and the courage, the broken and the healed, and the urgent and the steadfast. DeLillo lifts the story above the simple metaphors commercialized in the media and, engages in honest dialog rather than the flagellated diatribe of opportunistic pundits.The story centers on a family in crisis whose remarkable characters are victims of both 9/11 and their own eccentricities. The sometimes husband and wife, Keith and Lianne revive their marriage bonds when he arrives at her apartment, debris-ridden and injured from the Trade Center. The autopilot marriage slowly disengages as their post-9/11 pursuits pull them apart. Even their young son, Justin, is part of a Greek Chorus for the disasters yet to come. The young Chorus may childishly envision "Ben Lawton" in their future, but indeed we continue to suffer the apocalyptic evil he personifies. Nina, Lianne's mother, and her never-husband, Martin, are vehicles for the mores and conventional judgments that measure our societal worth.In the end though, what matters most to DeLillo is the individual right of self-determination and expression. Our actions during life's free-fall are our true worth. Keith and Lianne are flawed, but are compassionate, decent and will endure. The terrorist claiming piety confronts his mortality not in the arms of restless virgins, rather he discovers a fuselage of shrapnel, flames, and ashes. He is ultimately to be exhaled by the Towers, joining his victims in one final, mighty breath. Then heaven can truly judge him for his humanity.
User
A great writer's response to 9-11
This is a beautifully written short novel showing the searing impact of the 9-11 attacks on the lives of several New Yorkers. For several years now I have been focusing on how our best and brightest minds have responded to the horror that descended on us all that Tuesday morning. This is easily the most direct and dramatic response I have discovered. It starts with an office worker who escapes one of the towers and then centers on the impact on his life and his family and a woman who he meets shortly later. At the end of the novella he circles back to the events of that morning and basically puts the reader inside the WTC along with his central character.I strongly recommend this book. However, if you have not yet reas Collin McCann's Let the Great World Spin, I suggest you read this short novel first. McCann provides an equally well written narrative that counterpoints the magic and wonder of the high wire walker in 1974 with the tragedy at the same site 27 years later. It is the most positive and spiritually moving consideration of the books I have read that consider 9-11 and it is one of the best novels I have ever read.
User
Catharsis Now
This was the first DeLillo novel I read. The subject of 9/11 would be difficult for any writer to handle but DeLillo defines his parameters quite well. He takes a look at the way a single family is changed by this horrific event.Keith Neudecker is a real estate lawyer working in the World Trade Center when the plane hits. He survives and walks back into the life of his estranged wife right after the accident. In these tragic circumstances they try to patch up the remnants of their relationship. They have a precocious seven year old son, Justin, who doesn't say much but is affected enough by the attacks to start taking a binocular to the skies in search for more planes. Neither Lianne or Keith are especially sympathetic characters, but it's hard to tell if it's them or the way their personalities have been affected by the attacks. Near the end of the novel they are discussing what each wants and Lianne tells Keith, "You want to kill somebody". One of the things that is a bit perplexing about the story is we don't really know exactly what kind of people they were before the attacks. Keith's taciturn nature is what seems to have separated him from Lianne and the tragedy just magnifies this to a point where he drops out of life, he is so numb. Also, because of the attacks, both of them are on edge, prone to rage and have episodes of violence.I actually came to appreciate the novel a little bit more after finishing it than while I was actually reading it. This was partly due to the vague writing style of DeLillo. He seems to be trying too hard, and the prose sometimes comes off a bit pretentious like a young novelist trying to find himself at a creative writing workshop. Give me the prose of John Irving, Russell Banks or Cormac McCarthy any day. The sections of the book dealing with Lianne's senior citizens' writing group and Lianne's mother and her German art dealer lover were particularly excruciating. And boring. But the impression the novel leaves as a whole is that this was a point in time that clearly separates everything that came before from everything after.The best writing actually occurs in the closing sections of the three separate parts of the book which trace the doings of Hammad, one of the terrorists who ends up on the plane to hit the first tower. And the seamless way he connects Hammad and Keith at the end of the book is quite good.Some people have mentioned that this novel wouldn't be a good choice for the first DeLillo novel to read. They may have been right. But I still plan to read "Underworld" and "White Noise".** 1/2 stars (maybe ***)
User
One artist's rendering of the aftermath
I agree with other reviewers that this book is not linear, not meant to offer a compelling plot. It is one artist's expression (and DeLillo, by the way, is an artist; if you doubt it, read White Noise), in prose, of the aftermath of 9-11. As such, DeLillo does not try to make sense of the event itself--how can we, when it was senseless? He simply does what all artists do: He observes, then records, from his own perspective, what he sees. And what apparently he continues to see in the aftermath of The Event is the toll in psychological suffering (including--thank you--what has befallen the children who watched the events unfold), the confusion of the time, the anger and hate which continue. This book, from page one, raised my anxiety level--as it should, if the artist's work is effective. I hurried to finish it only because I wanted to get back to a place of safety and comfort... which I realize now may never be fully possible again.
User
Ambitious and Undone by its Ambitions
The lead characters Keith and Lianne are unsympathetic which is surprising for a tale of survivors. Their descent into obsessive self-examination is triggered by the events of 9/11, but seems more rooted in postmodern malaise. DeLillo wants them to stand in for the directionless, brooding American who wants for nothing except purpose. In this sense, they reminded me of Meursault in the Stranger, existentialists at home with their ennui and adrift after the unraveling of their wound-up lives. The book received less than charitable reviews when it was published because of its distasteful inclusion of the alleged mindset of the hijackers. With time, these juxtaposed lives seem more intertwined. The book wants to be a Paradise Lost without a centripetal God to hold a riven universe together. These Miltonian ambitions are unmet, but DeLillo’s nerve deserves praise.
User
Beautiful Vision
I finished this book today with tears in my eyes. It is lovely and horrible and truthful and beautifully written. It is about love and connection and loss and all that matters about being alive. How do you process 9-11? Don Delillo has written a powerful, moving novel about the aftermath. He is a writer's writer much like James Salter. You savor his sentences, they run down your chin like the juice from an overripe peach. There are passages so poignant that you want to read them aloud. It is not an easy read, he really makes you think, but you will have an experience that is profound.
User
Dissapointing and dull.
This book was very dissapointing. Couldn’t finish it just skimmed through it. The dialogues are just painfully confusing, the flow of the story is just…unreadable. There is sex mentioned everywhere..and it’s just…nope. The characters are as dull as this book. Using the Falling Man as a title for this book was just read bait. Thank God I got this second hand and not new. Utter dissapointment.
User
Falling Flat
When I picked up this book and I was instantly reminded of the eerie cover photo for the (much better) book Underworld, with the two trade centers surrounded by clouds and I believe Trinity Church (been there only once)with its cross dissecting the two predicting the omen that was to become 9/11.Inside the book I remained with the clouds never quite sure who was talking, and maybe that was the point, but I don't want to reread the same passage five times to make sure I know who is talking. The story floats and barely exists, again maybe the point of the story, but we really never know why these people do what they do. To point to the attacks and blame it solely on those attacks is shallow and cheap. We are in motion at all times and 9/11 served as the catalyst to alter these lives, which I have a feeling were on the same course but just got there faster. The WHY is just never explained.A much better read on this subject is Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, which ironically shows the falling man but never discusses him, but handles this tragedy with a deft touch and leaves you thinking unlikeFalling Man which left me as empty as the characters upon finishing.
User
A must read. This is a prosaic tone poem, concerning art, loss, biases, and identity.
Don DeLillo can be one of those writers that if you read him on a bad day, month, year, you'll disengage, and start resenting having started on this complex course.Approach his work when you're ready to allow his prose to sit heavy on your shoulders, filling up your mind with dense, sharp, brutal details delivered effortlessly and oh so simply.Falling Man is a brutal shot into the system. It covers racism, American unease, politics, the nature of details in one's life, highlighted by PTSD.A must read. It isn't a thriller, it is a prosaic tone poem, concerning art, loss, biases, and identity.
User
Regalato
Regalo apprezzato
User
Schlicht und präzise
Die Audioversion besticht durch eine schlichte und präzise Präsentation des Romans. Der Sprecher mit amerikanischem Englisch erzählt einfühlsam, aber nicht überschwenglich die GEschichte von Keith Neudecker, der Aus dem Nordturm des WTC während der Anschläge von 9/11 fliehen konnte, und seiner Exfrau Lianne. Verdrängung und Verharmlosung der unvergleichlichen Geschehnisse sind die Leitmotive der folgenden 3 Jahre. Der Roman stellt dar, verwirrt den Leser und lässt keine Möglichkeit, sich mit einer Person tatsächlich zu identifizieren. Zeit und Raum sind nach den Anschlägen außer Kraft gesetzt, so auch in "Falling Man".Fazit: Hörenswert
User
Things semed still,they seemed clearer to the eye,oddly,in ways he didn't understand.
9.11。コンクリートの塵埃が吹き荒れ崩壊の轟音が響く嵐の中から、ガラス片だか凝血塊だか肉片だかよくわからないものを体中に浴び、朦朧と歩んでくる生還者キース。彼が無意識に向かったのは約1年半前から別居中の妻リアンヌと7歳の息子ジャスティンの住むアパート。こんな冒頭の切迫するような描写のあとはキースとリアンヌの視点がランダムに採られ、「攻撃のあと」で世界が彼らの中でどのように変容したかが三人称で静かに綴られます。直接にテロや社会の反応を描くのではなく、物語世界は彼らが実際に直面する日常場面や生身で呼吸する周りの空気にほぼ限られています。リアンヌがジョルジョ・モランディの静物画の中にツインタワーを見たと感じたときのような喪失感が貫き、あの日キースが見た舞い落ちてくるシャツのような漂泊感が広がると、ポーカーに傾倒していくキースが纏ってるような空疎感が全体を支配していきます。攻撃直後に蔓延る不安感も直接的な表現はなく、ジャスティンと彼の友だちたちの行動がそれを象徴します。子供たちが双眼鏡で窓から見ているものは何なのか、子供たちがひそひそとその名を語るビル・ロートンとは何ものなのか。それが分かったときには、静かに伸ばされた触手の存在に背筋を走るような寒気を感じずにはいられませんでした。その他、リアンヌの母の謎めいたドイツ人の恋人にアメリカを批判的に語らせたり、テロ実行者の一人の短いエピソードや Falling Man のパフォーマンスシーンがいくつかカットインしてきたりするのですが社会派的な影はほんのわずか垣間見えるだけです。それでも常に対象と微妙な距離を置きながら、揺れるようなフレームワークでキースやリアンヌの感じる個人的な違和感や漂流感を丹念に醸しだしていく果てには、現代社会の空漠たる富と破壊の幻想が浮かび上がってるくるような印象です。いわゆる大作ではありませんが十分に深い読み応えがあります。
User
Livraison rapide et soignée
Bien.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago