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Deaf Sentence | 
enlarge | Author: David Lodge Publisher: Harvill Secker Category: Book
List Price: £17.99 Buy New: £8.99 You Save: £9.00 (50%)
New (28) Used (3) Collectible (1) from £8.99
Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 2749
Media: Hardcover Pages: 320 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.1 x 1.3
ISBN: 1846551676 EAN: 9781846551673 ASIN: 1846551676
Publication Date: May 1, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
Comic not tragic June 9, 2008 5 out of 8 found this review helpful
Desmond Bates has been going deaf for the last 20 years. He took early retirement from his position as Professor of Linguistics because he couldn't hear what his students were saying. Now, he faces the frustrations & indignities of deafness every day. His wife, Winifred (Fred), is sympathetic but sometimes irritated. When Desmond meets post graduate student, Alex Loom, he agrees - without realizing it - to a meeting about her thesis on the linguistics of suicide notes. He hasn't heard a word she said at a noisy gallery opening & doesn't realize he's agreed to anything at all. This leads him into a confusing relationship with the manipulative Alex, who wants Desmond to supervise her thesis. Desmond is also worried about his elderly father (also going deaf), living alone in London. This is the most poignant and humorous part of the book. Harry lives in the family home, in increasing squalor, hiding money under the floorboards, and refusing to spend any money on making his life more comfortable. David Lodge has written a beautifully observed novel which illuminates the world of people with hearing loss. Desmond's theory that blindness is tragic while deafness is merely comic is illustrated by the facts of his everyday life - struggles with hearing aid batteries, lip reading classes, & the funny yet frustrating misunderstandings in everyday conversation. Lodge shows the reader the isolation of the deaf in this absorbing novel.
you'll get a nice warm glow May 23, 2008 6 out of 11 found this review helpful
A sedate but heart-warming story of male ageing, the persistence of marriage in the face of life's little challenges and misunderstandings, and the swirling waters of father/son relationships.
Desmond is a retired Professor of Linguistics who is afflicted - as he feels - by deafness. His deafness leads him into ever more involving scrapes with a psychotic student, his wife, and his decrepit father.
Funny, fun and a bit emotional - not super-Lodge, but Lodge nonetheless. Most reminscent of Therapy, to me, with a similar narrator and narrative devices.
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