The Body Artist

The Body Artist

by Don Delillo (Author)

Synopsis

The Body Artist opens with a breakfast scene in a rambling rented house somewhere on the New England coast. We meet Lauren Hartke, the Body Artist of the title, and her husband Rey Robles, a much older, thrice-married director. Through their delicate, intimate, half-complete thoughts and words DeLillo proves himself a stunningly unsentimental observer of marriage, and of the idiosyncrasies that both isolate and bind us.

Rey says he's taking a drive and he does, all the way to the Manhattan apartment of his first wife, where he shoots himself. Lauren is left alone, or so she thinks. She is soon to discover, however, that there is a stranger in the house. An eerily gifted individual who often speaks in Rey's voice or in her own, who knows both intimate moments of their past life and things that haven't yet happened.

A lean, sad, beautiful novel, The Body Artist is pure DeLillo.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 192
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Picador
Published: 23 Feb 2001

ISBN 10: 0330484958
ISBN 13: 9780330484954

Media Reviews
DeLillo moves from one extreme to the other with his new novel. Whereas his last book Underworld was a densely woven, 900-page American epic spanning the entire period of the Cold War, The Body Artist is sparse, sharply focused and weighs in at a slim-line 150 pages. Whether it's a reaction to the critics who perceived Underworld as overlong or a realisation that he covered all the big themes in his previous work, DeLillo admirably refuses to retread the past. What we have instead is a portrait of an upper middle-class, East Coast marriage disintegrating into the husband's suicide and the wife's attempts to understand their relationship. The economy of the writing proves to be deceptively simplistic and the underlying theme of man's relationship with time is effectively explored. This may disappoint some new readers (indeed, many were disappointed by Underworld), but the full hardback price suggests that only hardcore DeLillo enthusiasts will pay the cost of admission.