The Antiques, Kris DAgostino
The Antiques, Kris DAgostino
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The Antiques
A Novel

Author: Kris D'Agostino

Narrator: Amy McFadden

Unabridged: 9 hr 43 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 02/07/2017

Categories: Fiction, Family Life


Synopsis

On the night of a massive hurricane, three estranged siblings learn that their father is dying. For the first time in years, they convene at their childhood home in Upstate New York, where the storm has downed power lines, flooded houses, and destroyed the family's antique store.

The Westfalls are no strangers to dysfunction. But never have their lives felt so out of control. Armie is living in their parents’ basement. In Manhattan, Josef, a sex-addicted techie, is struggling to repair his broken relationship with his daughters. Their sister, Charlie, who works in Hollywood as a publicist for a wayward young actress, just learned that her son has been expelled from preschool. Amid the storm, they come together to plan their father's memorial service, only to learn his dying wish—they must sell his priceless Magritte painting. As their failures are laid bare, they discover that hope often lurks in the darkest of places. And so, too, can hilarity.

A rollicking tableau of life in all its messy complexity, The Antiques is a heartbreaking, nimble, laugh-out-loud funny send-up of modern family life.

About Kris D'Agostino

Kris D'Agostino holds an MFA in creative writing from The New School. The author of The Sleepy Hollow Family Almanac, he lives in Brooklyn, New York.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Wendy

On the night of a massive hurricane, three estranged siblings learn that their father is dying. Amid the storm, they come together to plan their father's memorial service, only to learn of his one dying wish. The Westfalls are a dysfunctional family. The characters are well-developed, mostly unlikabl......more

Goodreads review by Deah

I didn't really like this book, and I need to start paying more attention to books that are characterized as "fast paced dysfunctional comedy". Having lived in it, I don't really see dysfunctionalism as very comedic, with the possible exceptions of Arrested Development and Jonathan Tropper's This is......more