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McGrath (Port Mungo) manipulates reader expectations expertly in this sharp-edged psychological study of a man deluded by his personal demons. Charlie Weir, a Manhattan psychiatrist, applies the life skills the members of his badly dysfunctional family have helped him hone to counseling patients with post-traumatic stress disorder. While everyone else he knows appears in danger of spinning out of orbit, Charlie exudes the calmness and confidence of a man in control of his circumstances. But he's unable to connect emotionally with the women in his life, and he repeatedly revisits his memory of the suicide of his ex-wife's brother, who was also one of his patients. With painstaking precision, McGrath drives this story to a climactic, if hastily resolved, moment of self-revelation in which Charlie uncovers a forgotten personal trauma that has perverted his perceptions and made him the most unreliable of narrators. Notwithstanding these efforts to give Charlie's tale the jolt of a psychological thriller, this is a haunting story of a man in the grip of a painful and beautifully articulated spiritual malaise. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Trauma is an intense book. It thoroughly grips you and refuses to loosen up on it's hold, long after you complete the book. The book is only 210 pages in length, but the pages are written so well that it is impossible to feel cheated. I don't want to give away plot details, so I'll just end by saying that everyone should read this book. It is well worth your time and money.
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.This is the second book I've read of Patrick McGrath's, and I admit I was a little worried that it might be similar to Asylum, since the narrators have the same occupation; I worried for nothing. McGrath's talent for constructing complicated, damaged, and completely human characters satisfies, and is always original.
My attention span is notoriously short, and I'm so impatient, and McGrath's writing style engrossed me. Unlike other books, even some of the really good ones, there wasn't pages upon pages of description (no one needs two pages describing how snowy/dark/etc. a setting is). McGrath's Trauma will suck you in. I didn't put it down all night.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted September 14, 2009
I never could predict what would happen next. It started off slow but created so many questions that you had to read to the end. The story was very dark and intense. Not recommended for light reading.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted April 5, 2011
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Overview
El psiquiatra Charlie Weir se dedica a acabar con los demonios de la gente, pero todavía no ha encontrando la manera de resolver los conflictos que tiene con su propia familia, especialmente la rivalidad con su hermano Walt o la pérdida de su mujer y su hija.A través de su hermano conoce a Nora, que pronto se convierte en su amante. Pero la vulnerabilidad de Nora, al principio tan irresistible, empieza a ocupar demasiado espacio en su vida. Charlie quiere averiguar la fuente de tanto sufrimiento, pero en su búsqueda, él mismo se encuentra con su inconsciente que le revelará un secreto espeluznante.