 
					
					
					
					
					
				
				
					
						Editorial New York Review Of Books
	
					
					
					
					
					
					
					
					
						Fecha de edición  febrero 2015  · Edición nº 1
					
					
					
						
						
							
						Idioma inglés
							
							
							
						
						
						
						
						
						
						
						
						
					
			    	EAN 9781590177594
					
						
						136 páginas
					
					
					
						
					
						Libro
						
							encuadernado en tapa blanda
						
						
						
						
					
					
					
						
					
					
					
								
					
					
						
Ending Up is a grotesque and memorable dance of death, full of bickering, bitching, backstabbing, drinking (of course), and idiocy of all sorts. It is a book about dying people and about a dying England, clinging to its memories of greatness as it succumbs to terminal decay.
Everyone wants a comfortable place to die, and Kingsley Amis's characters have found it in Happeny Tuppeny Cottage, out in the country, where assorted septuagenarians have come together to see one another out the door of life. There's grotesque Adela, whose sole passion is her cheapness; her cursing and scoffing brother Brigadier Bernard Bastable, always strategizing a new retreat to the bathroom before sallying forth to play some especially nasty practical joke; Shorty, the servant, who years ago had a fling with the brigadier in the barracks and now organizes his daily rounds from woodpile to wardrobe around a trail of hidden bottles; George Zeyer, the distinguished professor of history, bedridden and helpless to articulate his still- coherent thoughts; and Marigold, who slowly but surely is forgetting it all.
And now it is Christmas. Children and grandchildren are coming to visit their ailing elders. They don't know what lies in store before the story ends. None of us do.
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