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Purity

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Purity by Jonathan Franzen

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By Jonathan Franzen

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The Sunday Times bestseller from the author of Freedom and The Corrections

Young Pip Tyler doesn’t know who she is. She knows that her real name is Purity, that she’s saddled with $130,000 in student debt, that she’s squatting with anarchists in Oakland, and that her relationship with her mother – her only family – is hazardous. But she doesn’t have a clue who her father is, why her mother chose to live as a recluse with an invented name, or how she’ll ever have a normal life. Enter the Germans. A glancing encounter with a German peace activist leads Pip to an internship in South America with the Sunlight Project, an organization that traffics in all the secrets of the world – including, Pip hopes, the secret of her origins. TSP is the brainchild of Andreas Wolf, a charismatic provocateur who rose to fame in the chaos following the fall of the Berlin Wall. Now on the lam in Bolivia, Andreas is drawn to Pip for reasons she doesn’t understand, and the intensity of her response to him upends her conventional ideas of right and wrong. Jonathan Franzen’s Purity is a grand story of youthful idealism, extreme fidelity, and murder. The author of The Corrections and Freedom has imagined a world of vividly original characters – Californians and East Germans, good parents and bad parents, journalists and leakers – and he follows their intertwining paths through landscapes as contemporary as the omnipresent Internet and as ancient as the war between the sexes. Purity is the most daring and penetrating book yet by one of the major writers of our time.

Reviews

06 Aug 2016

Christina58

On behalf of Longlevens Book Club

Not sure if this novel is quite as good as his previous two, Corrections and Freedom. It is an epic, well over 500 pages. Franzen is an exceptional writer, skilled at brutal insights, evocative turns of phrase and at times genuinely funny. The novel travels back and forth in time and across continents too. Lots of complex characters, the two central characters being Tom and Andreas, whose very professions rely on the existence of the internet. Then there's Purity, who has a suffocatingly close relationship with her hippy mother, while trying to find the identity of her father in the hope that he will help her pay off her student debt!

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