After Silence

Book by Jonathan Carroll From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

After Silence is the eighth novel by the American writer Jonathan Carroll, published in 1992.[2] It tells the story of a successful cartoonist, the protagonist Max Fischer, who fell in love with a woman. Later he discovers many secrets, including a terrifying crime, about the woman and is confused about what to do.

CoverartistDave McKean
LanguageEnglish
PublishedApril 1992 (UK)[1]
April 1993 (US)
Quick facts Author, Cover artist ...
After Silence
First edition (UK)
AuthorJonathan Carroll
Cover artistDave McKean
LanguageEnglish
PublishedApril 1992 (UK)[1]
April 1993 (US)
PublisherMacDonald & Co (UK)
Doubleday (US)
Publication placeUnited States
Pages240
ISBN0385473516
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Reviews of the novel are mixed. LA Times Reviewer Susan Heeger, thought the plot had a strong design, but was not expertly told: "Carroll's book doesn't rise above the level of an intriguing cautionary tale over-directed by someone anxious to get his point across."[2] Publishers Weekly had a much more positive review, writing that the novel is "An electrifying, unforgettable novel that unfolds with the logic of a Greek tragedy, Carroll's parable on moral cowardice [has an] uncompromising honesty about how secrets gnaw and kill."[3] The London Review of Books describes the novel as representing the American "everyday" with "delicate descriptions".[4]

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