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The Beautiful Miscellaneous

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From the critically acclaimed award-winning author of The Mercury Visions of Louis Daguerre comes this moving story of a boy trapped in the shadow of his father's genius.

Nathan Nelson is the ordinary son of a brilliant physicist. From an early age, his father has doggedly prodded him toward greatness, enrolling him in whiz kid summer camps and teaching him college algebra. By the time Nathan is seventeen, hopes for a late-blooming prodigy seem dashed. Then, in the summer of 1987, everything changes. A tragic accident and ensuing coma leave Nathan with a profoundly altered mind that allows him to memorize vast amounts of information. Nathan's father, seeking an application for the new talent, sends him to a research institute where, amid misfits and savants, Nathan tries to find a purpose for the new way he perceives the world.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      In this eccentric coming-of-age story, Paul Michael Garcia's task is to make Nathan Nelson, whose father can't accept the fact that his son is not extraordinary, feel like a real, sympathetic, age-appropriate boy. Nathan's father is an almost brilliant physicist who lives in a very odd, very isolated mental universe. When at age 17 Nathan is nearly killed in a car crash, he develops a phenomenal memory plus synesthesia. His father sends him off to be studied at a research institute, which is filled with a cast of gifted oddballs whom Garcia expertly portrays. But overall Garcia's performance is somewhat gray and uninflected, as if nothing that happens to Nathan strikes Garcia as exciting or funny. It's fine, but curiously flat. B.G. (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 23, 2007
      F
      ollowing a car crash, Nathan Nelson, 17, is recovering from a two-week-long coma in July 1987. His father, Samuel, a physics professor at a Wisconsin college, wanted a genius for a son. Nathan, who narrates, has always been uninspired at best, but finds that the accident has left him with heightened senses, and a prodigious memory. Cerebral Samuel, whom Nathan can’t help revering, rejoices. Even when sent to a school for the gifted, however, Nathan mostly watches TV and smokes cigarettes with girlfriend Teresa, whose talent is a kind of X-ray vision. Teresa soon uses this talent to spot a tragedy looming in Nathan’s immediate future, and his life afterward, for the reader, is all frustrating anticlimax. As the years pass, Nathan works at a dead-end library job, stalks townspeople and parties with former schoolmates. This narrative’s strengths are its abundant humor, occasional lyrical patches and portrayal of the quirky but reliable Whit Shupak, a retired astronaut and family friend. But Smith (The Mercury Visions of Louis Daguerre
      ) never allows the immature, lackadaisical Nathan to really develop or emerge from his father’s shadow.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 24, 2007
      Smith's novel of the painfully ordinary son of a brilliant scientist, and his sudden acquisition of marvelous powers of memory, is read by Garcia with a taste for melodrama. Garcia's melodramatic streak is understated, prodded less by emoting than by tone of voice and careful pauses. Each sentence ends with a slight downturn, as if inflated hopes have rapidly dwindled to nothingness. Garcia, a stage actor by training, treats Smith's novel as an extended monologue to be performed, summoning the moods and sensations of its prose via subtle shifts of emphasis. The result is a performance-driven audiobook, rendered in minimalist fashion. Simultaneous release with the Atria hardcover (Reviews, Apr. 23).

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  • English

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