Winegarden

Winegarden

by Anthony Ferner (Author)

Synopsis

Winegarden recounts episodes in the life of Jacob Winegarden, an agnostic Jewish professor of theoretical physics whose speciality is 'thought experimentation'. A burly, vague, distracted man, a fan of popular films such as Toy Story and Fantastic Voyage, Jacob is still forlornly infatuated with his enigmatic wife, Miriam. She brings him back to reality: he is in a world of his own, she says, but there are things that need doing in this one.Winegarden operates at the elusive boundary between physics and metaphysics, trying to understand what the world of quantum mechanics can tell us about the soul, the existence of God, the meaning of love and memory; about how those who are absent can also be present. He uses pencil and paper, and classic aids to thought such as cats, zombies or occasionally Golems, because these creatures occupy ambiguous spaces between states of being and not-being and can thus illuminate the nature of the universe. His apparently whimsical thought experiments are revealed to have a deadly serious purpose. Making connections between his life and his work is his way of coping with the uncertainties of love, the trailing tendrils of his Jewish heritage, and the trauma of a devastating loss. Winegarden fears certainty: if the truth is bleak, it may be better not to know, to be uncertain. And if it has to be known, then there will be thought experiments that can imagine other universes where things might be different.Moving backwards and forwards in time and touching on different parts of Winegarden's life and thoughts, the stories are designed to fit together as a novella. Together they tell a larger personal story of grief and survival, the ambivalence and persistence of love, and the meaning of being Jewish.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 105
Publisher: Holland Park Press
Published: 28 Apr 2016

ISBN 10: 1907320504
ISBN 13: 9781907320507

Author Bio
Anthony Ferner was professor of international human resource management at De Montfort University and was the Faculty of Business and Law's head of research for 12 years. He retired in 2014.He has published many works of non-fiction, mainly about the behaviour of multinational companies.His short story 'The Cat It Is That Dies' was published in The Sea In Birmingham, edited by Gaynor Arnold and Julia Bell, and published by Tindal Street Fiction Group in 2013. Another of his short stories was shortlisted for the Irish Times summer short story competition in 2014. Winegarden is his debut novel.