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The Wanting Life

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"Mark Rader's The Wanting Life is somehow both quiet and deeply unsettling. A profound meditation on what we owe others and also ourselves, it balances the pleasure of getting to know a handful of vivid characters with the disconcerting awareness that their moral choices are, seeming by design, as impossible as our own." —Richard Russo, the Pulitzer-Prize-winning author of Empire Falls and Nobody's Fool
Set in Rome, Cape Cod, and Wisconsin over the course of the summer of 2009, and Rome during the spring of 1970, The Wanting Life tells the intertwined story of three members of the Novak family: Father Paul, a closeted gay Catholic priest who's dying of cancer and has secrets he desperately wants to share; Britta, his self-destructive sister and caretaker, who's struggling to find meaning in a world without her beloved husband; and Maura, Britta's daughter—a thirty-nine-year-old artist who's facing a choice between her husband and two children, or the man she believes is her one, true love.
Featuring one of most unconventional love stories you'll read this year, The Wanting Life is both a compulsively readable family drama about the toll that secrets and loyalty can take on us, and a gorgeous meditation on the comforts (and limits) of faith and intimacy that calls to mind novels like Marilynne Robinson's Home, Alice McDermott's Charming Billy, and Julian Barnes' The Sense of an Ending.|

  • SELECTED AS A TOP 10 DEBUT BY THE AMERICAN BOOKSELLERS' ASSOCIATION
  • A GREAT GROUP READS 2020 BOOK CLUB SELECTION
  • 2021 HONORED AUTHOR, WISCONSIN LITERARY COUNCIL
  • "Mark Rader's The Wanting Life is somehow both quiet and deeply unsettling. A profound meditation on what we owe others and also ourselves, it balances the pleasure of getting to know a handful of vivid characters with the disconcerting awareness that their moral choices are, seeming by design, as impossible as our own." ―Richard Russo, the Pulitzer-Prize-winning author of Empire Falls and Nobody's Fool


    Set in Rome, Cape Cod, and Wisconsin over the course of the summer of 2009, and Rome during the spring of 1970, The Wanting Life tells the intertwined story of three members of the Novak family: Father Paul, a closeted gay Catholic priest who's dying of cancer and has secrets he desperately wants to share; Britta, his self-destructive sister and caretaker, who's struggling to find meaning in a world without her beloved husband; and Maura, Britta's daughter—a thirty-nine-year-old artist who's facing a choice between her husband and two children, or the man she believes is her one, true love.


    Featuring one of most unconventional love stories you'll read this year, The Wanting Life is both a compulsively readable family drama about the toll that secrets and loyalty can take on us, and a gorgeous meditation on the comforts (and limits) of faith and intimacy that calls to mind novels like Marilynne Robinson's Home, Alice McDermott's Charming Billy, and Julian Barnes' The Sense of an Ending.

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      • Publisher's Weekly

        January 13, 2020
        Rader’s tender, nuanced debut follows the life and loves of a dying priest and his compassion for a restless niece. After a long and outwardly successful career as a Catholic priest in Wisconsin, Paul Novak is facing terminal liver cancer. As his sister, Britta, take care of him, he searches for life’s meaning. Paul is gay, and as his health declines, he shares his doubts with Britta about the choices he’s made. He and Britta also discuss Britta’s daughter, Maura, who is about to leave her husband and two children for a man she believes is the love of her life. Britta, who always accepted her brother’s sexuality, becomes more aware of his inner discontent and tries to reassure him of the value in serving his community as a pastor while also poking fun at his “martyr complex.” Paul grows increasingly restless, and asks her to accompany him to Rome, cuing flashbacks to a brief affair he had there with an Italian man in the ’60s. While Rader draws a heavy-handed parallel between the unfulfilled Paul and Maura, readers will be touched by the portrait of Paul’s rich interior life. Fans of The Great Believers will appreciate this story of heartfelt empathy.

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    • OverDrive Read
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    • English

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