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The Double Bind
by 
Chris Bohjalian
Susan Denaker
  
Publisher: Books on Tape
Subject(s):  Fiction
Literature
Language(s):  English
Awards:  Best Audio Books
Library Journal
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Format Information
OverDrive WMA Audiobook add to cart
Available copies:  
Library copies:  
File size:   166521 KB
ISBN:   9781415936580
Release date:   Feb 13, 2007

DescriptionMaximize/Minimize

A psychological novel about obsession from the New York Times bestselling author of Before you Know Kindness.

Based on a true story. Laurel works at a homeless shelter, where she meets a man named Bobbie Crocker. Only recently homeless, he has a history of mental illness and a box of photographs he won't let anyone see. When he dies suddenly, Laurel opens the box to discover that he was once a successful photographer for the rich and famous. As Laurel searches deeper into Bobbie's former life she finds that the photographs expose a deeply hidden family secret.


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ExcerptsMaximize/Minimize

From the book

...

Prologue

Laurel Estabrook was nearly raped the fall of her sophomore year of college. Quite likely she was nearly murdered that autumn. This was no date-rape disaster with a handsome, entitled UVM frat boy after the two of them had spent too much time flirting beside the bulbous steel of a beer keg; this was one of those violent, sinister attacks involving masked men--yes, men, plural, and they actually were wearing wool ski masks that shielded all but their eyes and the snarling rifts of their mouths--that one presumes only happens to other women in distant states. To victims whose faces appear on the morning news programs, and whose devastated, forever-wrecked mothers are interviewed by strikingly beautiful anchorwomen. She was biking on a wooded dirt road twenty miles northeast of the college in a town with a name that was both ominous and oxy-moronic: Underhill. In all fairness, the girl did not find the name Underhill menacing before she was assaulted. But she also did not return there for any reason in the years after the attack. It was somewhere around six-thirty on a Sunday evening, and this was the third Sunday in a row that she had packed her well-traveled mountain bike into the back of her roommate Talia's station wagon and driven to Underhill to ride for miles and miles along the logging roads that snaked through the nearby forest. At the time, it struck her as beautiful country: a fairy-tale wood more Lewis than Grimm, the maples not yet the color of claret. It was all new growth, a third-generation tangle of maple and oak and ash, the remnants of stone walls still visible in the understory not far from the paths. It was nothing like the Long Island suburbs where she had grown up, a world of expensive homes with manicured lawns only blocks from a long neon-lit swath of fast-food restaurants, foreign car dealers, and weight-loss clinics in strip malls.

After the attack, of course, her memories of that patch of Vermont woods were transformed, just as the name of the nearby town gained a different, darker resonance. Later, when she recalled those roads and hills-- some seeming too steep to bike, but bike them she did-- she would think instead of the washboard ruts that had jangled her body and her overriding sense that the great canopy of leaves from the trees shielded too much of the view and made the woods too thick to be pretty. Sometimes, even many years later, when she would be trying to fight her way to sleep through the flurries of wakefulness, she would see those woods after the leaves had fallen, and visualize only the long finger grips of the skeletal birches.

By six-thirty that evening the sun had just about set and the air was growing moist and chilly. But she wasn't worried about the dark because she had parked her friend's wagon in a gravel pull-off beside a paved road that was no more than three miles distant. There was a house beside the pull-off with a single window above an attached garage, a Cyclops visage in shingle and glass. She would be there in ten or fifteen minutes, and as she rode she was aware of the thick-lipped whistle of the breeze in the trees. She was wearing a pair of black bike shorts and a jersey with an image of a yellow tequila bottle that looked phosphorescent printed on the front. She didn't feel especially vulnerable. She felt, if anything, lithe and athletic and strong. She was nineteen.

Then a brown van passed her. Not a minivan, a real van. The sort of van that, when harmless, is filled with plumbing and electrical supplies, and when not harmless is packed with the deviant accoutrements of serial rapists and violent killers. Its only windows were small portholes high above...

 

ReviewsMaximize/Minimize
Kirkus, Starred Review...
"Psychological thriller, crime novel and "what-if" sequel to The Great Gatsby--with significant twists. Schizophrenic, yes, and alcoholic--but Bobbie Crocker isn't your stereotypical street person. Bohjalian (Before You Know Kindness, 2004, etc.) invests him with mystery; when he dies in Burlington, Vt., he leaves behind photographs from 1960s issues of Life magazine. Eartha Kitt, Dick Van Dyke, Muddy Waters--they're celebrity shots he took, combined with elegant evocations of Jazz Age Long Island. Laurel Estabrook, social worker at Crocker's shelter, discovers something else among them: a snapshot of herself riding a bike, just as she had, seven years before, when savaged by two thugs. The attack scarring her, she'd retreated into PTSD therapy, affairs with comforting, if noncommittal, father figures and a life less of ambition than service. Crocker's photos provide Laurel clues to their strangely interconnected pasts--and she sets out to decode them. Had the homeless man actually been to the manor born, son of Tom and Daisy Buchanan of fabled West Egg? His sister denies it, having spent most of her 70 years trying to whitewash her parents'reputation--Tom's brutality and Daisy's suspicious involvement in the car crash that killed one of his lovers. Had those wealthy, morally bankrupt parents caused Bobbie's "double bind,"
 

- Booklist...
"The Double Bind races toward a conclusion that boasts a shocking twist. . .This elegantly crafted tale is well worth delving into."
 
USA Today...
"Chris Bohjalian's The Double Bind is simply one of the best written, most compelling, artfully woven novels to grace bookshelves in years." --AP review
"Bohjalian is a master of literary suspense."
-Washington Post Book World
"Critics are giving Bohjalian...high marks for The Double Bind."
 
People...
"[An] imaginatively crafted novel." --Newsweek
"Great fiction...un-put-downable."
 
LIFE ...
"This is top-notch Bohjalian fiction." --Entertainment Weekly
"A page-turner with a wicked twist at the end."
 
LA Times ...
"[An] artfully crafted, terrifying new novel.... Bohjalian has written a literary thriller."
 
--New York Post...
"Truth may be stranger than fiction, but this book makes the case that truth is also more valuable as a source of inspiration." --Daily News
"A literate thriller about homelessness, random brutality and an obsession with characters from Fitzgerald's 'Great Gatsby.'"
 
Washington Post Book World...
"[Bohjalian writes] the sorts of books people stay awake all night to finish, and The Double Bind exerts that same hypnotic tug."
 
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel ...
"Clearly the most viscerally exciting of Bohjalian's normally cerebral books."
 
Daily News...
"This psychological thriller...offers a chilling depiction of the ways we choose to remember as well as what we forget."
 
The Denver Post...
"An intriguing mix of fact and fiction. . .powerful. . .a shocker" --The Courant
"Bohjalian fills The Double Bind with gripping twists and turns." --Redbook
"Part mystery and part psychological exploration...will certainly be interesting book-group fodder."
 
- Vermont Today...
"Part psychological mystery and part literary puzzle." --The Record (Bergen County, NJ)
"The suspense takes a twist at the end, which flips the story upside down."
 

Digital Rights InformationMaximize/Minimize
OverDrive WMA Audiobook
Burn to CD: Not permitted
 
Transfer to device: Permitted (3 times)
   Transfer to Apple® device: Permitted
 
Public performance: Not permitted
File-sharing: Not permitted
Peer-to-peer usage: Not permitted
 
All copies of this title, including those transferred to portable devices and other media, must be deleted/destroyed at the end of the lending period.
 


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