the_king_is_dead_lewis
2005 Nominated

The King is Dead

artwork-image

ABOUT
THE BOOK

Walter Selby is a hero of World War II who has come home from the Pacific to a heady career in politics, as an aide to the new governor of Tennessee. In Memphis, he meets the witty and beautiful Nicole Lattimore in an enchanted encounter after a baseball game. They fall in love. They marry. They have two children and lead a charmed life among the well-to-do. Walter takes his place in American politics, experiencing up close the changes of his age. And then-when he must follow the governor’s orders to evict a homesteading black family from their land-we see his disillusionment. Walter resigns his post, only to come home to an even more devastating blow. The virtuous man snaps and commits a shocking crime.

But this is more than simply a story of crime and punishment. Now we turn to our own times-from the father to his son, Frank. Haunted by the great affair of his youth, which ended when the girl he loved lost her hold on reality, Frank has never come to terms with his own good fortune. He is a reluctant movie actor-a star, even-but finds his work increasingly unfulfilling. That is, until a mysterious director offers him an intriguing new role, and Frank sets out across the country-from New York to Tennessee to Texas, from Oklahoma City to Kansas City, and, finally, to Los Angeles-in pursuit of the true story of his family, of what has brought him to this fork in the road.

ABOUT
THE AUTHOR Jim
Lewis

Jim Lewis was raised in New York and London. He has taught philosophy and literature at Columbia University, and has written about both politics and the arts for many magazines, journals, and museum catalogs. He has published two previous novels, Sister and Why the Tree Loves the Ax; collaborated on the story treatment for the film Kids; and written a screenplay, based on a short story of his own, for Francis Ford Coppola’s Zoetrope Studios. He lives in Austin, Texas.

Jim Lewis was raised in New York and London. He has taught philosophy and literature at Columbia University, and has written about both politics and the arts for many magazines, journals, and museum catalogs. He has published two previous novels, Sister and Why the Tree Loves the Ax; collaborated on the story treatment for the film Kids; and written a screenplay, based on a short story of his own, for Francis Ford Coppola’s Zoetrope Studios. He lives in Austin, Texas.

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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Date published
25/11/2024
Country
United States
Original Language
English
Author
Publisher
Alfred A. Knopf

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