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The Pesthouse by Jim Crace
The Pesthouse by Jim Crace













The Pesthouse by Jim Crace The Pesthouse by Jim Crace

“An Interview with Jim Crace.” October 22, 2007. Available at: Search in Google Scholarīiblio Blog, 2007. Available at: Search in Google Scholarīegley, A., 2003. “A Pilgrim in Craceland.” In: Southwest Review, vol. Available at: Search in Google Scholarīegley, A., 2002. “For me, England is a mythical place: an interview with Kazuo Ishiguro.” In: The Guardian, February 20, 2005. Despite the criticisms inherent in a story set in an America that has driven itself to ruin, The Pesthouse ends up as a strangely patriotic novel particularly if patriotism can be defined as loving a land and the idea of a country even when that idea clashes with reality.īecky Ohlsen writes from Portland, Oregon.Adams, T., 2005. But ultimately, Jackson and Margaret don't see it that way. By the end of the story, both protagonists have realized that good sense demands they leave behind what Crace calls the taints and perils of America but their hearts, and circumstances, dictate otherwise.Īt one point, stranded at a port with several other emigrants and unable to leave as planned, someone comments that they're all Americans now, and it's said with the resigned acceptance of a curse. Neither trajectory goes as expected Margaret recovers, and Jackson winds up traveling with her instead of his brother. He seeks shelter there one night while waiting for his injured knee to heal so he can rejoin his brother on their journey. She's been stashed away there for exhibiting the flu-like symptoms of the flux, a plague that periodically decimates the population of her village. The title of the book refers to the wilderness hut where Jackson and Margaret meet. The story follows two young people, the awkward and gangly but good-hearted Jackson and the fiery-haired innocent Margaret, on a journey toward the coast where, they believe, ships will take them away from their own benighted land and into a more promising future.

The Pesthouse by Jim Crace

As a result, the story has a sense of timelessness it could just as easily be set hundreds of years ago, rather than in an era in which coins, books and the decomposing husks of giant metal machines amaze and baffle those who encounter them even as they're treasured as artifacts. The Pesthouse is set in a future America remote enough that technology has faded into history and become superfluous.

The Pesthouse by Jim Crace

A post-apocalyptic fable with unexpected overtones of optimism and patriotism, the latest novel from innovative English writer Jim Crace comes across a bit like Road Warrior meets Grapes of Wrath.















The Pesthouse by Jim Crace