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There but for the / Ali Smith.

By: Smith, Ali, 1962-Publication details: New York : Pantheon Books, c2011. Edition: 1st U.S. edDescription: xiii, 236 p. ; 25 cmISBN: 0375424091; 9780375424090Subject(s): Middle-aged men -- Fiction | Personal space -- Fiction | Social interaction -- Fiction | Dinners and dining -- Fiction | Identity (Psychology) -- Fiction | Greenwich (London, England)LOC classification: PR 6069 .M4213 | T47 2011Summary: At a dinner party in the posh London suburb of Greenwich, Miles Garth suddenly leaves the table midway through the meal, locks himself in an upstairs room, and refuses to leave. An eclectic group of neighbors and friends slowly gathers around the house, and Miles' story is told from the points of view of four of them: Anna, a woman in her forties; Mark, a man in his sixties; May, a woman in her eighties; and a ten-year-old named Brooke. The thing is, none of these people knows Miles more than slightly. How much is it possible for us to know about a stranger? And what are the consequences of even the most casual, fleeting moments we share every day with one another?
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Item type Current library Class number Status Date due Barcode Item reservations
Book-Circulating Book-Circulating Fischer Hall Library
London Fiction
PR6069. M4213T47 2011 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available B004706
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PR6064. E86S3 The Scholar: A West Side Story PR6064. O765U568 The Unnumbered: A novel PR6068. Y74A615 253 : PR6069. M4213T47 2011 There but for the / PR6069. T4535 London bridges PR6073. A828E56 Fingersmith PR6076. R25576 2001 Mortal engines /

At a dinner party in the posh London suburb of Greenwich, Miles Garth suddenly leaves the table midway through the meal, locks himself in an upstairs room, and refuses to leave. An eclectic group of neighbors and friends slowly gathers around the house, and Miles' story is told from the points of view of four of them: Anna, a woman in her forties; Mark, a man in his sixties; May, a woman in her eighties; and a ten-year-old named Brooke. The thing is, none of these people knows Miles more than slightly. How much is it possible for us to know about a stranger? And what are the consequences of even the most casual, fleeting moments we share every day with one another?

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auth 20111123