Planet Claire, Jeff Porter
Planet Claire, Jeff Porter
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

Planet Claire
Suite for Cello and Sad-Eyed Lovers

Author: Jeff Porter

Narrator: Charles Constant

Unabridged: 9 hr 11 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 01/05/2021


Synopsis

Planet Claire is the story of the untimely death of the author's wife and a candid account of the following year of madness and grief. With Claire's death, Jeff Porter tries to imagine life without her but struggles with the bewilderment that follows. There was no gradual transition, no chance to say goodbye or resolve unfinished business. The grief is crushing, her death the psychological equivalent of Pearl Harbor.

As Jeff's life unravels, he analyzes his sadness with growing interest. He talks to Claire as if to evoke a presence, to mark a space for memory. He reports on his daily walks and shares observations of life's sadness, while reminiscing about various moments in their life together. Like Orpheus, the author searches for a lost love, and what he finds is not the dog of doom but flashes of an intimate symmetry that brighten the darkest places of sorrow.

Planet Claire takes listeners on a journey of sorrow that recalls memorable works by C. S. Lewis (A Grief Observed), Joan Didion (The Year of Magical Thinking), and Julian Barnes (Levels of Life). Planet Claire, however, is also playful, quirky, and self-ironic in a way that challenges the genre's traditional solemnity.

About Jeff Porter

Jeff Porter is the author of Lost Sound: The Forgotten Art of Radio Storytelling, the memoir Oppenheimer Is Watching Me, and coeditor of Understanding the Essay. His essays and articles have appeared in several magazines and literary reviews, including the Antioch Review, Northwest Review, Shenandoah, Missouri Review, Hotel Amerika, Wilson Quarterly, Contemporary Literature, and the Seneca Review. He loves cameras, dogs, and guitars-though not in that order. Jeff lives in Iowa City and teaches English at the University of Iowa.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Linda

This is an ode to a love and marriage, then sadly, an early death of the authors much beloved wife. Received as an early reviewers copy, I highly recommend this book. The writing is clever and filled with years of memories. While the author grieves the sudden death of his wife to a brain aneurysm, he......more

Goodreads review by Allison

I found this to be a beautiful and personal experience with grief. The author lost his wife unexpectedly from an aneurism, and the book is his journey with loss and figuring out where he fits in the world with this big change. I found this to be wholly relatable to the times in my life I’ve experien......more

Generally, this is a expression of man’s struggle with the sudden death of his beloved wife. I love the way he was able to aptly interweave sharing tales about his present life, their individual lives prior to marriage, and their married lives. It did become boring and redundant towards the end as i......more