Get a Life (novel)

Get a Life

First UK edition
Author Nadine Gordimer
Country South Africa
Language English
Publisher Bloomsbury
Publication date
2001

Get a Life is a 2005 novel by the South African writer Nadine Gordimer. The novel tells the story of environmental activist Paul Bannerman and his family. Paul is diagnosed with thyroid cancer and, after surgery and subsequent radiation treatment, has to live quarantined at his parent's place for some time. This significant change in his life also affects his family. The novel received mixed reviews by critics, and departs from other novels by Gordimer as it does not directly deal with Apartheid, instead focusing on the struggle of a single individual.

Plot

After Paul Bannerman, an ecologist, is diagnosed with thyroid cancer and receives an operation, he is left radioactive. As a consequence of his radioactivity, Bannerman is left in the care of his parents so as to avoid affecting anyone else. While he is isolated, he becomes unhappy with his wife, who is a marketing executive, as he sees her as lacking convictions and enabling those he opposes as an environmentalist.

Reception

Critics noted that the grammar in the book was strange, and that the novel seemed at times to not have been edited.[1][2] Sophie Harrison, writing for the New York Times, compared the novel favorably to The Magic Mountain, but noted differences between the respective protagonists of both novels. Harrison also criticized Gordimer's failure to focus on the particular details of Bannerman's struggle due to her attempt to provide a universally applicable narrative about illness. Gordimer was also faulted for failing to failing to adequately flesh out the personalities of the novel's characters.[3]

References

  1. Harrison, Sophie (18 December 2005). "Metaphor as Illness". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 October 2016.
  2. Stevenson, Jane (13 November 2005). "Cast out of Eden". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 October 2016.
  3. Birch, Carol (15 December 2005). "Get a Life, by Nadine Gordimer". Independent. Retrieved 17 October 2016.
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