Television Audiobook By Lauren Rothery cover art

Television

A Novel

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Television

By: Lauren Rothery
Narrated by: Lauren Rothery, Rebecca Lowman, Paul Michael
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Buy for $21.59

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"A glamorous, intriguing novel" (New York Times) about a jaded movie star and the two differently conflicted women in his orbit.

Some people you meet them and you imagine this movie together. The two of you make a kind of movie and then it’s over. Other people, what you imagine isn’t a movie, because it keeps going. It’s television . . . If you can’t see how romantic television is, you’re blind.

An aging, A-list movie star lotteries off the entirety of his mega-million blockbuster salary to a member of the general viewing public before taking up with a much younger model. His non-famous best friend (and often lover) looks on impassively, while recollecting their twenty-odd years of unlikely connection. And an aspiring filmmaker, unknown to them both, labors over a script about best friends and lovers while longing for the financial freedom to make great art.

Told in their alternating, intricately linked perspectives, Television is a funny, philosophically astute novel about phenomenal luck, whether windfall or chance encounter. Like Joan Didion’s classic Play It as It Lays, but speaking to a since irrevocably changed Hollywood, it portrays a culture in crisis and the disparities in wealth, beauty, talent, gender, and youth at the heart of contemporary American life. In this glittering but strange new world, lit up by social media and streaming services—what, if not love, can be counted in your favor?

With plays in chronology, bright, nimble dialogue, and a profoundly modern style, Lauren Rothery’s debut novel is an arresting feat of literary impressionism, and marks the arrival of a significant new talent to the landscape of American fiction.

Genre Fiction Literary Fiction Literature & Fiction Satire World Literature Funny
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It is rare that I leave a negative review but this will be one. It's not that Television is a bad book, but it is one without a clear throughline, lacking well defined or sympathetic characters, and sorely missing a cohesive structure. It is also misleadingly packaged. This is not a book set in the Television Industry per se and has little to do with Television writ large. It's Summary in Audible describes some other book I'm sure, one with an engaging flow, memorable characters, a discernable plot... nothing "funny or philosophically astute" about it. Television feels to me like a valiant first effort that suffers from very weak editing. So... do yourself a favor and avoid this book and it's mindless droning and ultimately uninteresting prose.

Very dissatisfying

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