AUDIOBOOK

Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi

A Novel

Geoff Dyer
3.9
(10)
Duration
9h 23m
Year
2005
Language
English

About

Every two years the international art world descends on Venice for the opening of the Biennale. Among them is Jeff Atman, a jaded and dissolute journalist, whose dedication to the cause of Bellini-fuelled party-going is only intermittently disturbed by the obligation to file a story. When he meets the spellbinding Laura, he is rejuvenated, ecstatic. Their romance blossoms quickly, but is it destined to disappear just as rapidly? Every day thousands of pilgrims head to the banks of the Ganges at Varanasi, the holiest Hindu city in India. Among their number is a narrator who may or may not be the Atman previously seen in Venice. Intending to visit only for a few days, he ends up staying for months, and suddenly finds a hitherto unexamined idea of himself, the self. In a romance he can only observe, he sees a reflection of the kind of pleasures that, willingly or not, he has renounced. In the process, two ancient and watery cities become versions of each other. Could two stories, in two different cities, actually be one and the same story? An irrepressible and wildly original novel of erotic fulfillment and spiritual yearning, Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi is dead-on in its evocation of place, longing, and the possibility of neurotic enlightenment.

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Reviews

"A raucous delight…Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi is truly surprising-very funny, full of nerve, gutsy and delicious. Venice will never be the same again!  "
Michael Ondaatje, author of The English Patient  
"Geoff Dyer is a True Original-one of those rare voices in contemporary literature that never ceases to surprise, disturb and delight. A must read for our confused and perplexing times."
William Boyd, author of Nat Tate - An American Artist 1928-1960  
"No contemporary writer blends genres better than Geoff Dyer, and his latest novel-a vigorous mash-up of satire, romance, travelogue, and existential treatise-is his best yet…Dyer excels at savage comedy-see his tableau of jaded art critics desperately swilling bellinis-but he's even better on the profound pleasures and indignities of the flesh, which are the forces that unite his novel's two very
Time magazine, The Top 10 Everything of 2009

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