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The Ticking Heart

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Part modern fable, part detective novel, a journey through grief in the imaginary world of Metaphoria.

One cold winter night, Charlie shares a cab with a stranger in a purple hat. As they talk, a cloud of purple smoke overwhelms him and he wakes up to find himself behind the only desk in the Epiphany Detective Agency. Charlie, as it turns out, is trapped in Metaphoria, an otherworldly place that reality has forgotten, a place where everything means something else. His first client is Shirley Miller, who insists on hiring Charlie to find her husband's missing heart. In fact, she's so insistent that she replaces Charlie's heart with a bomb. He has twenty-four hours to find Twiggy Miller's heart — and its meaning — or his own will explode.

Tender and brutal, optimistic and despairing, this modern fable by the author of the cult hit All My Friends Are Superheroes takes a fresh look at what it means to fall into, and out of, love.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 19, 2019
      This enjoyable but haphazard romp from Kaufman (All My Friends Are Superheroes) drops the divorced Charlie Waterfield into the land of Metaphoria to find the emotional purpose of the human heart. Kaufman’s irreverent and bursting prose explores Charlie’s metaphoric odyssey to reckon with his relationship to his own heart and its capacity to give and receive love. In 24 hours, Charlie must assume the role of sole detective of the Epiphany Detective Agency, navigate the seemingly chaotic Metaphoria, grapple with his exes and his love, and reach his own epiphany in time to get his son to karate class. As Charlie faces a cyclops, white blood cells, Tachycardia Tower in the Never Ever Enough District, his ex-girlfriends, and a ticking bomb, he ends up taking a real beating. Along the way, he meets Twiggy, a theater performer whose “Spero Machine” helps him connect the dots of his past. While Kaufman’s jokes are often cheap and easy, he reminds readers that no metaphor can go too far in Metaphoria, because “you’ve been told not to be proud.” Fans of Mark Leyner will enjoy Kaufman’s messy string of outrageous scenarios.

    • Kirkus

      July 1, 2019
      The 40-something protagonist of Kaufman's (Born Weird, 2012, etc.) surreal novel travels to a city where metaphors are real and his own anxieties could be fatal. Kaufman's novel plays with archetypes in a grandiose fashion. Charlie, the hero, is a divorced father still ruminating on the end of his long marriage. Without warning, he magically arrives in the city of Metaphoria. "Everything in Metaphoria is metaphorical. This can get a bit troubling, confusing, even intimidating. However, that is the point," Charlie is told just before he's transported there. Once he arrives, he's given the role of a detective and asked to find the missing heart of his client's husband--and has a bomb sewn inside his own chest to raise the stakes. As befits the concept of Metaphoria, nearly every character he encounters has something stylized about them, from a bereft Cyclops to a sinister scientist scamming the city's population. Along the way, Charlie grapples with his own anxieties, which manifest in unsettling ways--including the perennial threat that he might shrink away to nothingness. Despite the book's short length, there's a lot going on here, and it's not always clear if Charlie's journey is intended as satire or a symbolically rich inner journey � la Robertson Davies' Jungian novel The Manticore. The whimsical tone is marred by some of Kaufman's word choices. The method of transportation in and out of the city is called a "poof," and Charlie learns that, once he's sorted out his issues and had an epiphany, he will "trigger a poof." The resulting phrase has far different connotations than the fantastical ones found in this narrative, which creates some dissonance when reading it. Kaufman's novel is expansive and imaginative, but at times its cartoonish sense of whimsy feels overpowering rather than nuanced.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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