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The great circle book
The great circle book







the great circle book

They develop a close friendship with local mixed race boy Caleb, whose mother is also an alcoholic, and who spends most of his time at their home. The children have a wilderness childhood, thriving on neglect.

the great circle book

His young wife is never found and when Addison is sent to prison he leaves the twins in the care of his brother Wallace, an artist and a drinker, who lives in Missoula, Montana. When the ship that Addison Graves captains, the Josephina Eterna, sinks following an explosion in the hold, he chooses to rescue himself and the baby twins rather than remain on board until the last passenger leaves, as is his duty. Their mother Annabel is emotionally disconnected from her babies, appearing to suffer from postnatal depression. She and her twin brother Jamie (who will later become an artist) are the only children of Addison Graves, a ship’s captain, and a 19-year-old socialite who falls pregnant on their first, casual, liaison. The novel begins with an account of the circumstances preceding her birth. The novel’s heroine is Marian Graves, an early 20 th century aviator, a contemporary of Amelia Earhart and Charles Lindbergh. Whilst wishing to take nothing away from the author, I suspect there was a brilliant and meticulous editor involved with this book too. Fascinating, clever, brilliantly conceived, exhaustively researched, intricately plotted and beautifully written. Well, here we are, just over halfway through the month and I have finished it – I COULD NOT STOP LISTENING! This is an extraordinary book, a huge achievement. My book club also decided to read it, though with some trepidation, as its longer than most books we select. Between twice or thrice weekly runs, a bit of driving for work and a bit of solitary walking, I decided I could probably get through it in the month. It is by some distance the longest on the shortlist – 608 pages, which amounts to 25 hours listening time. Looking at the relative heft of each book, I decided that Great Circle by Maggie Shipstead would have to be ‘read’ as an audiobook. I have never actually managed to get through all six books in the six weeks or so between the shortlist being publicised and the award ceremony, but this year I am determined. When I set out a few weeks ago out on my annual quest to read the Booker shortlist ahead of the announcement of the winner early next month, I decided I’d need a strategy.









The great circle book