
Exit Ghost
Philip Roth
Returning to his hometown to find that all has changed, Nathan Zuckerman - incontinent and impotent - comes back to New York, the city he left eleven years before. Walking the streets he quickly makes several connections that explode his carefully protected solitude. In a rash moment, he offers to swap homes with a young couple. And from the moment he meets them, Zuckerman wants to exchange his solitude for the erotic allure of the young woman Jamie, who draws him back to all that he thought he had left behind: intimacy, and the play of heart and body.
Suddenly involved, as he never wanted or intended to be involved again, with love, mourning, desire and animosity, Zuckerman plays out an interior drama of vivid and poignant possibilities.
Product Details
About Philip Roth
Reviews for Exit Ghost
Times Literary Supplement
If its subject embraces mortality, its sentences ring with vitality, and Roth reminds us why "the transforming exigencies of prose fiction" still matter even as the light begins to die
Mail on Sunday
Taken together the Zuckermam novels read as both a noisy New Jersey Kaddish for 50 years of American History and an extraordinary contemporary "Song of Myself"
New Statesman
At his best, Philip Roth constructs his novels from huge blocks of material, to produce an effect that is overpowering
Observer
Here is a noble revelation of the curel vulnerability of the body we live in without choice
Times Literary Supplement
Consistently enthralling...full of tart humour and dancing intelligence
Literary Review
Nobody who has followed him - one of the great writers of our time - thus far, should miss it
Scotsman
A great book, a necessary book
Sunday Herald
There is something magnificent about Philip Roth's undimmed rage and life-lust... As a body of work, these novels may have changed the way that readers think about their own mortality and may also have enlarged their sense of what it means to be a man; and one hopes that even E.I. Lonoff might consider that a fair tribute to the power of art
Sunday Telegraph
This is a book about the importance of literature that lasts
Telegraph