Read The End of the World as We Know It Online
Authors: Robert Goolrick
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Entertainment Weekly
“Clear, forceful. . . . An exquisite memoir that everyone should read.”
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Minneapolis Star Tribune
“A courageous and successful work.”
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People
“Anecdotes of captivating vitality. . . .
The End of the World as We Know It
is barbed and canny, with a sharp eye for the infliction of pain.”
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The New York Times
“Indelible. . . . A devastatingly shrewd no-nonsense description of mid-20th century Southern mores and manners that can rank with the work of Walker Percy or Peter Taylor.”
âNewsweek.com
“Magnificent. Hypnotically candid and beautifully written. . . . Singular.”
âHaven Kimmel, author of
A Girl Named Zippy
“A devastating debut. . . . Worthy of William Styron and Flannery O'Connor. . . . Goolrick is clearly a victim of his parents' brutal abuse, but he has broken out of the categories of âvictim' and âsurvivor' to become a powerful truth-teller.”
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Kirkus Reviews
, starred
“Searing. . . . Heartbreakingly intimate. . . . Breathtaking honesty.”
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Richmond Times-Dispatch
“[A] blistering family memoir.”
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Seattle Post-Intelligencer
“Robert Goolrick is a huge, shining talent.”
âMartin Clark, author of
Plain Heathen Mischief
“Brilliant. . . . A brief yet powerful record of long familial dys-function.”
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The Raleigh News & Observer
“Sharp, searing. . . . The events of
The End of the World as We Know It
jump off the page with unforgettable vitality. . . . It reminds readers why one man's unflinching truth still matters, still demands the printed page.”
âBookslut.com
“Raw, impassioned, terrifying. . . . To say that it's the story of life in an alcoholic household in Virginia would be like calling
A Streetcar Named Desire
a play about a lonely woman. It catches the premise but not the development or the dramatic power.”
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Palm Beach Post
“A brave, haunting, riveting book.”
âLee Smith, author of
On Agate Hill
“Beautifully written, the story itself is at once compelling and repellent.”
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The Southern Pines (NC) Pilot
“A masterful blend of comedy and tragedy [that] is disturbing perhaps in direct proportion to how beautifully it is written.”
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Richmond (VA) Style Weekly
“A haunting story.”
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The Emporia Gazette
“Witty, wise and revelatory.”
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Pawling (NY) News Chronicle
“With devastating honesty and razor-sharp wit, Goolrick looks back with love and anger at the parents who both created his world and destroyed it.”
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Virginia Living
“Difficult to put down. . . . Simple but vivid.”
âPopmatters.com
“A quick, careening read, urged on by the memoirist's inherent promise to unveil the secrets of his subject.”
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Rain Taxi
“A moving, unflinchingly rendered story of how the past can haunt a life.”
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Publishers Weekly