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The Brief History of the Dead by Kevin Brockmeier

By Pinky McLadybits | Posted Under Book Reviews | Comments (37)



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The premise of this book is quite intriguing. As long as there is someone alive who remembers who you are, you will live in The City with other dead people after you pass away. When there is no one left with memories of you, you will leave The City of the dead and move on. On to what, this book does not address. It sounds like a beautiful way to view the afterlife and the dead seem to be happy in The City. Happy until some of them disappear due to a deadly virus sweeping the Earth.

Laura Byrd works for Coca-Cola and has been sent to Antarctica to study wildlife for the company. She is alive. She is in Antarctica with polar specialist Michael Puckett and soft drink specialist Robert Joyce. The six month expedition is protracted when the contact with Coca-Cola is lost. Joyce and Puckett set out to find another team of specialists in hopes of using their radio. When the men do not return, Laura decides to find them and sets off into the below-freezing temperatures.

The two stories seem to have no connection when you begin reading Brockmeier’s novel. His writing is enchanting and I quite enjoyed it. There were times when I couldn’t figure out why Brockmeier was naming some characters and spending time with them only to move on to someone else before a purpose had been shown. Eventually all of the threads converge and there is a payoff, but it might be difficult to stick with it if you don’t enjoy the author’s style. I don’t want to analyze what was being said and how it altered my perceptions of life and death, if at all, because it should speak to each person in a different way. Thanks to MelBivDevoe for the recommendation!

This review is part of the Cannonball Read series. For more of Pinky McLadybits reviews, check out her blog.










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Comments

This is easily the best book I have read in about five years. Brockmeier's writing is truly enchanting. He has a way of making us care about characters who are peripheral. From the opening sentences of the book, he establishes The City in such a way that I never once questioned its existence or the way people arrived and left, or the different relationships they formed in The City. That's quite an art because with books that cover events outside of the real world, I almost always find a careless flaw that makes me doubt the premise. I highly recommend this one to anyone who enjoys a good read.

Posted by: PaddyDog at February 15, 2010 1:20 PM

I read this about six months ago and really enjoyed not only the attention to detail in Laura's struggles in the Arctic but the way the story eventually came together.

Posted by: jack at February 15, 2010 1:30 PM

I've added this to my ever-growing "to be read" list.

Posted by: Nicole at February 15, 2010 1:45 PM

Ooooooo: WANT.

Posted by: Snuggiepants the Deathbringer at February 15, 2010 2:01 PM

Sounds interesting, definitely.

Posted by: Sara at February 15, 2010 2:06 PM

Definitely going to add this to my list.

Posted by: Carrie at February 15, 2010 2:08 PM

Woot woot! You're quite welcome, Pinky. Glad you enjoyed it! It's one of my favorite books. I just love the way Brockmeier writes. I've also read some of his short stories, and I recommend them to anyone who liked this book.

Posted by: MelBivDevoe at February 15, 2010 3:11 PM

I absolutely loathed this novel. It is an interesting idea of an afterlife, wrapped in an interesting idea of the apocalypse ... that should have been twenty pages long. Nothing happens in the entire novel. Characters do not change or evolve. Mysteries are not revealed. Everything of substance in the book is revealed on the back cover. The fact that the premise is so utterly fascinating and the execution so pointless deeply disappointed me.

Posted by: Steven Lloyd Wilson at February 15, 2010 3:20 PM

MelBiv:

I second that. His short stories are just as beuatifully written. Every now and then there's a sentence that just takes my breath away.

Posted by: PaddyDog at February 15, 2010 3:22 PM

SLW:

Why does something have to happen for a book to be good? ISn't something that is beautifully written and takes you from A to B enough? I would also argue that characters do change. The personalities in The City become different people and make new connections when they arrive there. Who needs to have a mystery? What happens to us after we die is a mystery (pauses for the crazy Christian right to contradict me) and why shouldn't it be a mystery here. There are many books (Franny and Zooey for instance) where nothing happens (Franny lies on her bed while the writer describes the house and the room's decor for most of Zooey) but they are beautifully written.

Posted by: PaddyDog at February 15, 2010 3:30 PM

Hmm. SLW, I feel you in that I get frustrated when I feel that there's no real plot movement, but gorgeous writing can trump that for me on occasion. I'll have to see what this book does for me in that vein.

Posted by: Nicole at February 15, 2010 3:38 PM

Uh-oh. What SLW mentioned bothers me, too. I'm gonna have to check this out.

Posted by: Snuggiepants the Deathbringer at February 15, 2010 4:07 PM

I'm with Nicole on this one.

Posted by: Jelinas at February 15, 2010 4:21 PM

To me, this was a story about how powerful memory can be. Brockmeier created a rich world and characters that I became invested in; I'm not ashamed to admit that the gorgeous ending had me in tears. It never once occurred to me that the story was going nowhere - and I'm usually the first to complain about something like that or even give up on the book. But this book captivated me completely.

Posted by: MelBivDevoe at February 15, 2010 4:56 PM

I loved this novel both for writing and for concept - and my tolerance for lovingly styled stories in which nothing happens is pretty low - EXCEPT for the inclusion of the random industrial crime element. I have no wish to spoil anything, but the, um, syrupy explanation for the virus seemed much too heavy for a book that was otherwise so dreamlike and crystalline.

Of course, maybe I'm just biased as a resident of a particular Southern city.

Posted by: Rachel W. at February 15, 2010 5:23 PM

Colour me intrigued. Nice review.

Posted by: ScienceGeek at February 15, 2010 6:19 PM

PaddyDog: There are many books (Franny and Zooey for instance) where nothing happens (Franny lies on her bed while the writer describes the house and the room's decor for most of Zooey) but they are beautifully written.

Two things: first, don't get me wrong, the book is beautifully written and utterly drags one in. I read it in one sitting, completely captivated. But as I read, I became increasingly disenchanted with the book as a whole because of it not doing anything whatsoever with its premise.

Which brings me to the inevitable second point which amounts to a Jay-level of contrarianism: yes a book can have nothing happen and be beautifully written. I would argue that such books are not stories so much as linguistic pornography.

Posted by: Steven Lloyd Wilson at February 15, 2010 7:06 PM

Oh SLW, you had me at "linguistic pornography." *cue Springsteen ballad*

Posted by: Nicole at February 15, 2010 7:37 PM

You have no idea how difficult it is for me to not reply to that using the word "cunning."

Posted by: Steven Lloyd Wilson at February 15, 2010 7:53 PM

This sounded interesting but something I probably wouldn't read (except I may skim it to see what, exactly, a "soft-drink expert" is), but then PaddyDog said it was the best book she's read in five years. That's lofty praise; I'll be adding this to my library list.

Posted by: vikky at February 15, 2010 8:14 PM

Colour me intrigued. Quick question: why is Coke paying for a study of wildlife? Is this an integral plot (or lack thereof) point?

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