Record ID | harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.09.20150123.full.mrc:563976655:1641 |
Source | harvard_bibliographic_metadata |
Download Link | /show-records/harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.09.20150123.full.mrc:563976655:1641?format=raw |
LEADER: 01641cam a2200361 a 4500
001 009565059-8
005 20060317150951.0
008 050325s2005 onc 000 1 eng
010 $a 2005391543
016 $a20059006463
020 $a0887841910
029 1 $aNLC$b20059006463
035 0 $aocm57529397
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dNLC$dGZM
043 $an-us-ma
050 00 $aPR9199.4.H48$bT53 2005
055 3 $aPS8565 E853$bT43 2005
082 00 $a813/.6$222
100 1 $aHeti, Sheila,$d1976-
245 10 $aTicknor /$cSheila Heti.
260 $aToronto :$bHouse of Anansi Press,$c2005.
300 $a109 p. ;$c21 cm.
520 $a"George Ticknor is trying to reconcile his own failure with the success of his boyhood friend, the famous American historian William Prescott. Ticknor's life has been reduced to a series of awkward meetings, failed dinner parties, and other misfortunes he is loath to own up to. Situated in the complicated and contradictory moments that make friendships both tenuous and difficult to relinquish, Ticknor's fixated thoughts about his and Prescott's dissimilar fates lead him through a litany of rationalizations and recriminations, a psychological maze that is paranoid and harrowing as well as ludicrous and absurd."--Anansi Press.
600 10 $aTicknor, George,$d1791-1871$vFiction.
600 10 $aPrescott, William Hickling,$d1796-1859$vFiction.
651 0 $aBoston (Mass.)$vFiction.
650 0 $aJealousy$vFiction.
650 0 $aSelf-perception$vFiction.
655 0 $aPsychological fiction.
655 7 $aHistorical fiction.$2gsafd
988 $a20050304
049 $aHLSS
906 $0DLC