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Census
by Ball, Jesse
- Used
- Very Good
- Hardcover
- Condition
- Very Good
- ISBN 10
- 006267613X
- ISBN 13
- 9780062676139
- Seller
-
Staten Island, New York, United States
Payment Methods Accepted
About This Item
Ecco, 2018-03-06. Hardcover. Very Good. (NB70 MAR9T9AL) hardcover in dust jacket, only the slightest shelf wear, unread condition
Reviews
On Mar 13 2018, a reader said:
4.5★s
"My wife and I always spoke of making a trip together to show our son the country, but it never came. For one reason or another, it never came, and so I felt when my wife passed, when the idea rose in me about the census, I felt finally it was time to take out the Stafford, to drive the roads north. In her death, I felt a sure beginning of my own end – I felt I could certainly not last much longer, and so, as life is vested in variety, so we, my son, myself, we had to prolong what life we had by seeing every last thing we could put our eyes upon."
Census is the seventh novel by American poet and author, Jesse Ball. In his introduction, he explains the dedication to his older brother, Abram Ball, who had Down syndrome and died, aged twenty-four, in 1998. The surgeon and his son travel north in their (unnamed) country from City A to the town of Z in their Stafford Carriagecar, taking the Census.
In that role, they meet a large number of people, many of whom are welcoming and hospitable, whilst some others are quite the opposite. The surgeon asks his questions and hears many stories, some first-hand, others more removed. Most are kind to his son but: "It is easy for humans to be cruel, and they leap t it. They love to do it. It is an exercise of all their laughable powers."
The father notes that his son's behaviour is not always easily explicable, but "I have never sought to change what is essentially to my eyes, a basic resourcefulness that finds at any moment something profound. My wife was of the same opinion, but surely we did suffer for it. The long apologies we would have to give to the legions of helpers. But strangely, no one was ever angry about it. People became fond of him very quickly, and that has always helped."
A couple with a now-deceased Down syndrome daughter told him: "There is a kind of understanding that can grow in a place, and then everyone, every last person can be a sort of protector for them. This is a thing she can confer on others – a kind of momentary vocation, and that is a real gift… Some people were cruel to her, but here, something grew. It was a fine place for her to live, and when she died, she was missed"
There are no quotation marks for speech, which may annoy some readers, although any speech is usually apparent from the context. Similarly, for almost three quarters of the book, characters are not given names, and are distinguished only by descriptors: my wife, my son, a boy, the man, the doctor, an old man. In a way, it reflects on the anonymity of the census and is partly explained by the father's musings on our desire to name things.
Where Ball has the father saying "…we felt lucky to have had him, and lucky to become the ones who were continually with him, caring for him" it could not be clearer that this is what he and his family felt for his brother. This is a wonderfully moving tribute to an obviously loved sibling.
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Details
- Bookseller
- Book Focus (US)
- Bookseller's Inventory #
- 006267613X
- Title
- Census
- Author
- Ball, Jesse
- Format/Binding
- Hardcover
- Book Condition
- Used - Very Good
- Quantity Available
- 1
- ISBN 10
- 006267613X
- ISBN 13
- 9780062676139
- Publisher
- Ecco
- Date Published
- 2018-03-06
Terms of Sale
Book Focus
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About the Seller
Book Focus
Biblio member since 2019
Staten Island, New York
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- Jacket
- Sometimes used as another term for dust jacket, a protective and often decorative wrapper, usually made of paper which wraps...
- Shelf Wear
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