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The Vanishers

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the acclaimed novelist of The Folded Clock and founding editor of The Believer magazine comes a "sharp-eyed, sardonic, hilarious" novel (The New York Times Book Review) about grief, female rivalry, and the furious power of a daughter’s love.

Julia Severn is a talented student at an elite institute for psychics. When Julia’s mentor, the legendary Madame Ackerman, grows jealous of her protégée’s talents, she subjects Julia to the painful humiliation of reliving her mother’s suicide . . . and then launches a desperate psychic attack.
But Julia’s gifts, though a threat to her teacher, prove an asset to others. Soon she’s recruited to track down a missing person who might have a connection to her mother. As Julia sifts through ghosts and astral clues, everything she thought she knew about her mother is called into question, and she discovers that her ability to know the minds of others—including her own—goes far deeper than she ever imagined.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 12, 2011
      A young student surpasses her troubled mentor, unleashing much wrath, in Julavits’s wry, witty new novel (after The Uses of Enchantment). Julia Severn is a mediocre student at New Hampshire’s Institute of Integrated Parapsychology, which is no Hogwarts. Frauds mix with the rare mystic, and students attempt—mostly in vain—to telepathically petrify hunks of pork. Enigmatic psychic diva Madame Ackermann handpicks Julia to be her stenographer, spreading jealousy until Madame feels threatened by Julia and morphs from harmless dingbat into sinister sociopath, ousting the student and debilitating her abilities. Relocated to New York, Julia finds work that is so odd it’s often mistaken for performance art. As she begins to recover her abilities, she meets the mysterious Alwyn and finds her fortune deeply intertwined with a missing feminist French filmmaker who may hold insight about her dead mother. Julia comes to discover much about herself, the world, and her formidable former mentor. Packed with a revolving cast of faces, the story frequently switches into the past, especially at the outset, which can create confusion. But the overall effect is magical, and Julavits’s often acerbic prose generates laughs despite the sad reality of Julia’s life. Agent: Henry Dunow, Dunow, Carlson & Lerner.

    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2011
      A dour heroine tracks her psychic attacker in this dark latest from Julavits (The Uses of Enchantment, 2006, etc.). At New Hampshire's Institute of Integrated Parapsychology, Julia Severn is selected to record Madame Ackerman's words as she roams the cosmos. But Madame Ackerman's "regressions" are actually extended naps, so Julia begins inventing psychic revelations. Shortly after Julia envisions actual information sought by a client of Ackerman's, who is trying to find controversial filmmaker Dominique Varga, she becomes so ill she has to leave the Institute. A year later, mysterious new acquaintance Colophon Martin tells Julia she is the victim of psychic attacks by Madame Ackerman. Her only solution is to avail herself of the services of his company, vanish.org, which helps people disappear from untenable lives. Colophon offers to help Julia because he's that former client of Madame Ackerman's; Julia's psychic abilities have been suppressed by her ailments, and he needs her to get well to find Varga, who disappeared in 1984. Julia's willing, because her anxious father has revealed that her mother, an artist who committed suicide when Julia was one month old, knew Varga, who "made your mother believe death could be an artistic act." The connections only grow more sinister (and far-fetched) after Julia checks in to the Goergen, a refuge in Vienna for vanishers of various sorts. What is the true identity of the fellow resident who claims to be "Hungarian skin care royalty?" Is Madame Ackerman behind the emails Julia keeps getting from "aconcernedfriend"? What happened in Room 13, 152 West 53rd Street, on October 24, 1984? Julia's ailments recede, and her psychic powers grow, but she still seems clueless as the story lumbers towards an extremely elaborate denouement culminating in a confrontation with Madame Ackerman. A searing final section very nearly redeems all this clutter, as Julia returns to New Hampshire to unmask the real culprit and to make the grimmest sort of settlement with her dead mother. Intelligent and ambitious, but also heavy-handed and alienating.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2011

      Madame Ackermann, who heads up an elite school for psychics, refuses to cede power to talented student Julie Severn and eventually cripples her with a fierce psychic attack. Julie returns to the humdrum world but is soon asked to help find a missing person--an artist with ties to Julie's mother, who committed suicide when Julie was an enfant. Sounds like another layered, ambitious novel from Julavits. Attractive to your not-average reader.

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2012
      Julavits (The Uses of Enchantment, 2006) remains intrigued by the dramatic and comedic potential of the paranormal. In her brain-teasing fourth novel, Julia, a student at the Institute of Integrated Parapsychology, runs afoul of the famous Madame Ackermann. Once Ackermann realizes that her prot'g' succeeded where she failed in helping film historian Colophon Martin in his quest for information about the vanished French filmmaker Dominique Vargas, she exacts occult revenge, causing Julia to suffer from an unidentifiable, viciously debilitating malady. Alwyn, an angry and secretive rich girl working with Colophon, takes charge. Sequestered in bizarre, clandestine clinics, Julia finds that her psychic powers flash like heat lightning as she discovers that Vargas' story is entangled with that of her mother, who killed herself a month after Julia was born. In a convoluted plot stoked by diabolical humor and wry suspense, Julavits nearly squanders the novel's potential for deeper inquires. Instead, monstrous mother-figures and life-or-death power struggles evoke poignant questions about blame and forgiveness, inheritance and independence, memory and grief, and the obdurate mysteries of trust and love.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 27, 2012
      Julia Severn is an initiate at a psychic institute in New Hampshire who comes under the tutelage of a medium named Madame Ackermann. But Julia—who is searching for answers about her deceased mother—is forced to leave the institute following a dispute with Ackermann in which Julia suffered a crippling psychic attack. Eventually, Julia finds her way to a facility in Vienna that deals with psychic wounds. Along the way, she further develops her psychic powers while meeting individuals connected to either Ackermann or her deceased mother. Xe Sands turns in a stellar performance in this audio edition of Julavits’s latest, providing narration that is secretive and seductive. For the novel’s many female characters, Sands offers up a host of spot-on voices and accents. The result is intriguing, whimsical, often funny, and thoroughly enjoyable. A Doubleday hardcover.

    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2012

      Readers who seek out challenging, multilayered novels will enjoy tackling Julavits's (The Uses of Enchantment) latest, which blends psychology and the paranormal with a dose of satire. Julia Severn enrolls at The Workshop, an exclusive graduate school for psychics, intent on honing her talents to make contact with her dead mother. Instead, she angers Madame Ackermann, who plagues her with a psychic attack that causes mysterious maladies and terrible visions of her mother's suicide. Sent to an Austrian spa in an attempt to "vanish" from her tormentor and regain the energy needed to "regress" through time to track down an elusive feminist pornographic filmmaker, Julia stumbles through consciousness and past lives. Julavits throws in surprising, original descriptions (one character looks "so convalescent apres-ski" while another has "eyes starfished by mascara"). VERDICT This novel is reminiscent of Arthur Phillips's The Egyptologist: clever, humorous, with supernatural elements. While one can easily get confused about what is real and what is imagined, readers who surrender to the narrative may be rewarded with rich insights about losing a parent. [See Prepub Alert, 9/11/11.]--Christine Perkins, Bellingham P.L., WA

      Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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