A children's bible : a novel
/ Lydia Millet.
- First edition.
- New York : W. W. Norton and Company , c2020
- 224 pages ; 22 cm
Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize
An indelible and haunting new novel that explores the loss of childhood, intergenerational conflict, and humanity's complacency in the face of its own demise. Lydia Millet's multilayered new novel - her first since the National Book Award Longlist Sweet Lamb of Heaven -- follows a group of children and their families on summer vacation at a lakeside mansion. The teenage narrator Eve and the other children are contemptuous of their parents, who spend the days and nights in drunken stupor. This tension heightens when a great storm arrives and throws the house and its residents into chaos. Named for a picture Bible given to Eve's little brother Jack, A Children's Bible is loosely structured around events and characters that often appear in collections of Bible stories intended for young readers. These narrative touchstones are imbedded in a backdrop of environmental and psychological distress as the children reject the parents for their emotional and moral failures-in part as normal teenagers must, and in part for their generation's passivity and denial in the face of cataclysmic change.
English
9781324005032(hardcover)
Family vacations---Fiction Brothers and sisters----Fiction Survival---Fiction Conflict of generations---Fiction Environmental disasters----Fiction Parent and teenager----Fiction Runaway children----Fiction End of the world----Fiction Children's Bibles---Fiction