Catalogue

Record Details

Catalogue Search



The immortalists  Cover Image Book Book

The immortalists / Chloe Benjamin.

Benjamin, Chloe, (author.).

Summary:

If you knew the date of your death, how would you live your life? It's 1969 in New York City's Lower East Side, and word has spread of the arrival of a travelling psychic who claims to be able to tell anyone the day they will die. Four siblings keep their death dates secret from one another, but their prophecies inform their next five decades.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780735213180 (hardcover)
  • Physical Description: 346 pages ; 24 cm
  • Publisher: New York : G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2018.
Subject: Brothers and sisters > Fiction.
Siblings > Fiction.
Fortune-tellers > Fiction.
Families > Fiction.
Fate and fatalism > Fiction.
Aging > Fiction.
Magicians > Fiction.
Prophecies > Fiction.
Interpersonal relations > Fiction.
Genre: Domestic fiction.

Available copies

Holds

  • 2 current holds with 0 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Burns Lake Public Library AF BEN (Text) 35198000650045 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Castlegar Public Library FIC BEN (Text) 35146002072767 Fiction Volume hold Available -
Chetwynd Public Library FIC BEN (Text) 35222000989102 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Creston Public Library FIC BEN (Text)
Acquisition Type: New
35140100033870 Fiction Volume hold Available -
Fernie Heritage Library FIC BEN (Text) 35136000634627 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Fort Nelson Public Library FIC BEN (Text) 35246000944890 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Fort St. James Public Library BEN (Text) 35196001019491 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Fort St. John Public Library AF BEN (Text) 35211000328403 ADULT Fiction Volume hold Available -
Hazelton Public Library Fic (Text) 35154000120497 Adult Fiction - Main Floor Volume hold Available -
Headingley Municipal Library BEN (Text) 36440000270974 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2017 December #2
    *Starred Review* Restless during the seismic summer of 1969 on New York's Lower East Side, the four Gold siblings, descendants of Jews who fled violent persecution overseas, sneak off to see a fortune-teller, who tells them each, separately, the date of his or her death. So begins Benjamin's bewitching and provocative second novel (following The Anatomy of Dreams, 2014). Each character's story is saturated with paradox in this delving family saga laced with history and science and a heart-pounding inquiry into self, inheritance, fate, and the mind-body connection. At 16, Simon runs away to San Francisco, comes out as gay, and discovers his gift for dance just as AIDS begins its shattering assault. Magician Klara calls herself the Immortalist. Daniel is a military doctor; scientist Varya is conducting a longevity study with rhesus monkeys. All are afflicted by the poison of prophecy. Aligned in her artistic command, imagination, and deep curiosity about the human condition with Nicole Krauss, Dara Horn, and Stacey D'Erasmo, Benjamin asks what we want out of life. Duration? Success? Meaning? Who do we live for? Do our genes determine our path? How does trauma alter us? Benjamin has created mesmerizing characters and richly suspenseful predicaments in this profound and glimmering novel of death's ever-shocking inevitability and life's wondrously persistent whirl of chance and destiny. Copyright 2017 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2018 January
    Only the good die young

    It's fitting that Chloe Benjamin was born on All Soul's Day, a religious festival remembering those who have died. Her latest novel, The Immortalists, explores the eternal mysteries of death and the boundaries of science, religion and magic.

    "The Immortalists felt like the book that I was always meant to write," Benjamin says during a phone call from her home in Madison, Wisconsin. "If I died now, at least I would have written this. I don't think I'll ever have a book like this again."

    That's a somewhat startling statement coming from a young writer, but at just age 29, Benjamin is well on her way to being an established author. Her first novel, the award-winning The Anatomy of Dreams, explored another intangible—the surprising power of lucid dreaming.

    Benjamin says of her two novels, "The Anatomy of Dreams is a more internal look at the conscious and the subconscious, and an almost claustrophobic exploration of the central relationship. With The Immortalists, I wanted to cover more ground socially, culturally and historically, as well as interpersonally. It felt important to challenge myself to write a book with greater scope and diversity."

    "It was really one of the hardest writing experiences I've had."

    The premise of The Immortalists is immediately gripping: In 1969, the four siblings of the Gold family (Varya, age 13; Daniel, 11; Klara, 9; Simon, 7) live in Manhattan's Lower East Side, where their father owns a tailor shop. When Daniel gets wind of a mysterious fortuneteller, the children track her down and have an encounter that will forever change their lives. The soothsayer predicts the exact date of each of their deaths.

    The four sections of the book address each sibling's life in order of their predicted demise. Simon was told he would die young, while Varya seems destined to live until a ripe old age. Or is she? One of the book's central questions is whether the fortuneteller is clairvoyant, or whether her prophecies simply become self-fulfilling.

    "I wanted to leave this open to interpretation, to see what the reader thinks," Benjamin says. "I've always really been drawn to books with multiple perspectives or books that show how different people can interpret the same event in such varied ways."

    The book's beginning brings to mind the four siblings who step through the wardrobe in The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. What's more, at one point in The Immortalists, Klara's daughter cries out, "It's like Narnia!" when it begins to snow.

    Benjamin laughs at the reference, explaining, "That was actually something I said when I arrived at college on the East Coast. Everyone made very prompt fun of me, because I was coming from California."

    As for parallels to the C.S. Lewis classic, Benjamin says they were unintentional, although she admits, "I think those books were in the petri dish that created this one."

    The Gold children all take strikingly different paths: Daniel, the oldest Gold boy, becomes a military doctor, while Varya ends up a scientist. Simon and Klara run away to San Francisco, where Simon dances, both ballet and in a gay bar. Klara becomes a Las Vegas magician, following in the footsteps of her namesake grandmother. She even takes to performing her grandmother's act, the Jaws of Life, in which she hangs from a rope by her teeth, calling herself "The Immortalist."

    Benjamin, who initially knew nothing about magic, modeled the Jaws of Life trick after a real act she stumbled upon during her research. A Hungarian immigrant who called herself Tiny Kline once performed this extraordinary feat over Times Square and later played a flying Tinker Bell in Disneyland. "I think she just held on with her teeth," Benjamin says. "It was so dangerous and unbelievable."

    It's not surprising that showmanship is at the forefront of so much of the novel. Benjamin's mother is a stage actor, and as a child Benjamin was involved in theater and active in ballet until college.

    "I miss those things a lot," she admits, "but I don't feel brave enough to perform at this point in my life. I'm more comfortable writing something where I can make it as perfect as I can and then put it out there for consumption. But that level of risk and uncertainty and vulnerability—and also a kind of flash and dazzle—was a part of my childhood."

    Benjamin did substantial research for each section of the book, adding: "I don't make it easy on myself. There's an adage to write what you know; I'm more interested in writing about what I want to know."

    The research for Varya's section proved most vexing. At first Benjamin had Varya study a species known as the immortal jellyfish, which seemed to be a perfect thematic fit­­—although the subject had its own challenges.

    "I had to read so much molecular biology," Benjamin recalls, "and that is not the way my brain works. So I'd be practically crying, sitting with this stack of academic journals that I couldn't possibly understand. I worked on that section for years." Ultimately, she ended up starting it over. "It was really one of the hardest writing experiences I've had."

    The completed novel spans decades, explores a variety of philosophical questions and addresses everything from gay life in 1970s San Francisco to the ethics of scientific research on animals.

    As for her next novel, Benjamin is already at work. "I get an idea maybe once every five years," she says, "and it's like, OK, well I guess that's what I'm writing. So as much as it's driving me crazy, I have faith."

     

    This article was originally published in the January 2018 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Copyright 2018 BookPage Reviews.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2017 August #1

    Benjamin follows up the Edna Ferber Prize-winning The Anatomy of Dreams with a BookExpo Buzz Book already bought by the Fox TV Group. It opens in 1969 New York with four children daringly visiting a fortune teller said to be able to predict the date of one's death. Elder siblings Daniel and Varya become an army doctor and a scientist, respectively, while younger, rebellious Klara works as a magician in Las Vegas, and the insouciant youngest, Simon, finds love and dance in San Francisco. Did the fortune teller's predictions determine their fates? With a national tour.

    Copyright 2017 Library Journal.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2017 October #4

    In her second novel, Benjamin (The Anatomy of Dreams) constructs an imaginative and satisfying family saga. In 1969, the four rambunctious Gold children, Simon, Klara, Daniel, and Varya, visit a psychic on Manhattan's Lower East Side who predicts the date each of them will die. The novel then follows how the siblings deal with news of their expiration dates. In the late '70s, Klara and Simon, the youngest, run off to San Francisco, where the closeted Simon becomes a dancer and Klara a magician and stage illusionist who believes she can commune with the spirits of dead relatives. In 2006, Daniel, a married army doctor based in Kingston, N.Y., learns that the psychic who foretold their fates is a con artist wanted by the FBI, and attempts to track her down. In 2010, Varya, the eldest Gold, is a longevity researcher who feels closest to the rhesus monkeys she uses for her experiments. But one day, a journalist named Luke interviews her and, in the process, changes the course of her life. The author has written a cleverly structured novel steeped in Jewish lore and the history of four decades of American life. The four Gold siblings are wonderful creations, and in Benjamin's expert hands their story becomes a moving meditation on fate, faith, and the family ties that alternately hurt and heal. Agent: Margaret Riley King, WME Entertainment. (Jan.)

    Copyright 2017 Publishers Weekly.

Additional Resources