![]() ![]() Its speculative history has an air of fate and something of the gravitas of genuine tragedy, because we all know in advance the point at which its wealth of provocative and insinuating detail must converge: that stunning moment at Dealey Plaza in November 1963, captured for all time by Abraham Zapruder's home-movie camera, when President Kennedy's head explodes. This sentiment reverberates throughout this elusive book. The thinness of contemporary life, DeLillo writes in his 16th novel. This is partly because it grounds the author's interest in paranoia and catastrophe in an attempt to solve the riddle of Oswald's character, but also because what Libra has – which DeLillo's novels as a general rule tend not to have – is an irresistible teleology. ZERO K by Don DeLillo RELEASE DATE: A cryogenic facility beyond the edges of civilization provokes a series of meditations on death and life. Among Don DeLillo's sixteen previous novels, White Noise (1985) is commonly held up as the apotheosis of his satirical vision, while his postwar epic Underworld (1997) tends to be lauded as his grand statement, his unofficial entry (they're all unofficial) in the never-ending competition to write the Great American Novel.įor me, the essential DeLillo novel is Libra (1988), his fictionalised account of the life of Lee Harvey Oswald. ![]()
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