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The Apartment: A Novel Hardcover – December 3, 2013
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One snowy December morning in an old European city, an American man leaves his shabby hotel to meet a local woman who has agreed to help him search for an apartment to rent. The Apartment follows the couple across a blurry, illogical, and frozen city into a past the man is hoping to forget, and leaves them at the doorstep of an uncertain future-their cityscape punctuated by the man's lingering memories of time spent in Iraq and the life he abandoned in the United States. Contained within the details of this day is a complex meditation on America's relationship with the rest of the world, an unflinching glimpse at the permanence of guilt and despair, and an exploration into our desire to cure violence with violence.
A novel about how our relationships to others-and most importantly to ourselves-alters how we see the world, The Apartment perfectly captures the peculiarity and excitement of being a stranger in a strange city. Written in an affecting and intimate tone that gradually expands in scope, intensity, poetry, and drama, Greg Baxter's clear-eyed first novel tells the intriguing story of these two people on this single day. Both beguiling and raw in its observations and language, The Apartment is a crisp novel with enormous range that offers profound and unexpected wisdom.
- Print length208 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTwelve
- Publication dateDecember 3, 2013
- Dimensions6 x 0.75 x 8.75 inches
- ISBN-101455574783
- ISBN-13978-1455574780
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Review
"THE APARTMENT Greg Baxter's absorbing, atmospheric and enigmatic first novel, unfolds in extended paragraphs without chapter breaks on a single snowy mid-December day in a fictional European city that evokes aspects of Vienna, Prague and Budapest. Its long, frigid journey into a long, sleepless night explores a man's uneasy relationship with his past, himself and a world in which violence is inescapable."―Los Angeles Times
"THE APARTMENT proved to be a quiet and powerful read through and through. Baxter's clean and direct prose generates its own momentum. He chooses not to create a tidy drama where characters are explained by their pasts. Rather, he creates something bigger and more true."―The Daily Beast
"Violence, lurking offstage throughout the story, makes a shocking entrance near the end, setting in place everything that's come before. The effect is devastating, in the best possible way."―Denver Post
"A beautiful meditation on brutality and culture, which are sometimes one and the same."―Minneapolis Star Tribune, "Hot Five" list
"THE APARTMENT is an exciting debut novel, and leaves one eager for Baxter's follow-up, whenever that may be."―The Daily Beast, Hot Reads
"It is one of the best novels I have read in a long time... It is very much to Baxter's credit that he presents this struggle as if it were thriller, love story, philosophical novel and dark comedy combined, in a novel not like a bullet but like an arrow flying straight to the heart of the matter."―Stacey D'Erasmo, New York Times Book Review
"This profound and perfectly paced novel worked such magic on me that by its final pages I felt simultaneously destroyed and revived."―Antoine Wilson, author of Panorama City
"The novel shines most in the telling-the slow, deliberate narrative unfolds like a quiet symphony, and Baxter's prose lingers inexplicably, like a beautifully sad song."―Publisher's Weekly
"Clever, entertaining, brave, it stretches the rules while following a man through one day of his life. I loved it."―Roddy Doyle
"A formally and thematically ambitious debut novel... Following the lead of James Joyce, Don Delillo and others, the novel takes place over the course of a single day in the life of its protagonist as he makes his way across an unnamed European city in search of the titular apartment...A very smart novel."―Kirkus Reviews (Starred Review)
"THE APARTMENT is the kind of novel that expands one's sense of what a novel can and ought to be and do. It is brave, captivating, formally innovative in a way that never seems showy or false, and with a tone perfectly balanced between poetic-factual deadpan and astringent wit-this book is a triumph from beginning to end."―Michael Griffith, author of Spikes and Trophy
"Exceptional--a book rich in ideas and poetry."―Hisham Matar, Man Booker Prize finalist for Country of Men
"Imagine you're on a roller-coaster ... suddenly, without warning, it tips vertiginously, so quickly that your chest constricts and while you're there, suspended, momentarily, at the apex of this roller-coaster, you're aware suddenly of a kind of clarity, a totally new perspective on everything below. Greg Baxter's THE APARTMENT is a bit like this ... Full of unshowy wisdom and surprising moments of beauty."―Sunday Telegraph
"Stunningly good."―Saturday Review, BBC Radio 4
"Admirable for its scope, ambition and unashamed seriousness of purpose, as well as its willingness to take stylistic and structural risks."―Observer
"Baxter's superbly elegant, understated writing explores the dynamics of America's relationship with the rest of the world."―The Times
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Twelve (December 3, 2013)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 208 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1455574783
- ISBN-13 : 978-1455574780
- Item Weight : 11.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.75 x 8.75 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #4,050,781 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #25,116 in War Fiction (Books)
- #32,115 in Military Romance (Books)
- #153,501 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Greg Baxter's debut novel, The Apartment, is a terrifically written, somewhat meandering book that both is and is not about what you think it is.
In an unnamed European city (although some reviewers have guessed this is Prague, Baxter said the novel's setting is an amalgamation of several different cities), an unnamed American narrator is planning to meet his friend, Saskia, to find him an apartment, as he had been living austerely in a formerly elegant hotel since he arrived. The narrator is in his early 40s, a former Navy sailor who had served on a submarine in Iraq and then returned to that country as a defense contractor. But he doesn't like to talk about the past, because of the things he did while he was in Iraq.
"I could fill the silence by talking about the past, but I try not to think about the past. For much of my life, I existed in a condition of regret that was contemporaneous with experience, and which sometimes preceded experience. Whenever I think of my past now I see a great black wave that has risen a thousand stories high and is suspended above above me, as though I am a city by the sea, and I hold the wave in suspension through a perspective that is as constrained as a streak of clear glass in a fogged-up window."
The novel takes place over a one-day period, although the narrator finds himself reminiscing on a number of encounters he has had with people throughout his life, both after arriving in this city and in his life before coming to the city. It is around Christmastime, and winter has the city in its thrall. Snow falls throughout the day.
The narrator and Saskia travel throughout the city, on foot as well as by train, bus, streetcar, and taxi. They stop at cafés and bars, shops and outdoor holiday markets, tourist attractions and remarkable architecture. They encounter several of Saskia's friends, including the misanthropic Janos and the pretty yet flighty Manuela, and his being an American makes him more interesting and more loathsome to some. Throughout the day they spend much of their time both talking and not talking, about art, culture, history, their families, and at times the narrator is willing to answer basic questions about his military service and where he made his money.
"Saskia can move quickly from being very cool to being very funny. It makes me think she's not trying to be one or the other. I wish we could preserve our relationship as it is now for a long time. I wish we could remain strangers."
The narrator has spent much of his life trying to disengage from connections and commitments despite his work history. And although he is reluctant to let anyone know too much about him, and loves the lack of permanence that hotel living allows, he looks forward to losing himself in the city and having an apartment of his own.
While in much of the novel the pair is on the hunt for an apartment, the plot frequently veers off topic, as the narrator remembers people he has encountered, including his closest childhood friend back in America, as well as several instances during his time in Iraq. While many of these reminiscences happen without warning or connection to what is currently happening, my guess is that they occur because the narrator suddenly encounters something that triggers a memory or sensation.
This is a very short novel, only about 210 pages, but it is very weighty. It is so much more than I expected, more complex than a simple search for an apartment. It is a book about relationships, about avoiding your past but knowing that it shapes you, about trying to remain disengaged while simultaneously engaging. And more than that, it is a paean to immersing yourself in a place, in its culture, its history, its people, and its beauty.
I really enjoyed Baxter's storytelling ability in this book, even if I wished it had stayed on course a little more than it did. While the vagueness of the setting and the narrator's life was intriguing, I would have enjoyed a little more specificity to flesh out my experience. But in the end, this is a powerful and tremendously compelling story that I am really glad I read, and I can't stop thinking about it.
Top reviews from other countries
Sadly, the main characters then set out on a short journey, five stops on the metro, to find him an apartment. This journey takes about 150 pages as they bump into people along the way and the author digresses into numerous flashbacks. There are sections that might be better as pages on Wikipedia where the author explains how perspective works in art and even bores the reader with an account of an obscure and extinct variation on the game of billiards. It might be that the idea of perspective from the world of art holds the key to understand this collection of glimpses of encounters.
When I was a child, I enjoyed watching the Two Ronnies on TV which was a mix of performances by two comedians who shared the name, Ronnie. The only part that I hated was Ronnie Corbett’s monologues. He would set out to tell a story and get totally lost in digressions. Baxter’s book is like this, but without the comic genius of the Two Ronnies. The lack of chapter divisions adds to the sense that we are not getting very far very fast and these would have provided a welcome breather for the reader.
I found this novel hugely frustrating. I would have loved to see a smouldering romance develop between the main characters. I would have loved to see the cross cultural themes developed. The first dozen pages are brilliant. After that, don’t bother to read any further!