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Untouchable

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

It is the autumn of 1999. A year has passed since Lucy Darby's unexpected death, leaving her husband David and son Whitley to mend the gaping hole in their lives. David, a trauma-site cleanup technician, spends his nights expunging the grisly remains of strangers, helping their families move on, though he is unable to do the same. Whitley—an eleven-year-old social pariah known simply as the Kid—hasn't spoken since his mother's death. Instead, he communicates through a growing collection of notebooks, living in a safer world of his own silent imagining.

As the impending arrival of Y2K casts a shadow of uncertainty around them, their own precarious reality begins to implode. Questions pertaining to the events of Lucy's death begin to haunt David while the Kid, who still believes his mother is alive, enlists the help of his small group of misfit friends to bring her back. As David continues to lose his grip on reality and the Kid's sense of urgency grows, they begin to uncover truths that will force them to confront their deepest fears about each other and the wounded family they are trying desperately to save.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from August 29, 2011
      Bronson Pinchot proves the perfect choice to narrate this novel of grief, sorrow, and recovery. Eleven-year-old Whitley Darby—known as “The Kid”—refuses to accept his mother’s death. Instead, he convinces himself that she’s alive and will eventually return to him. To ensure that return, Whitley takes a vow of silence and communicates by writing in school notebooks. This behavior only adds to his alienation and the daily bullying he endures. Pinchot—with a soft, easy delivery—lovingly brings this melancholy story and its diverse characters to life. His narration is smooth and compelling, while the voices he lends Whitley and his father fully realize their sadness and despair. But Pinchot also manages to infuse each scene with a sense of hope. The result is heartfelt performance of a rich and deeply moving story. A Tyrus Books paperback.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 14, 2011
      A woman's death sends her trauma-site cleanup tech husband and their troubled son into a tailspin in O'Connor's heartfelt first novel (after novella Among Wolves). During the late days of the Y2K scare, David Darby mops up the gore left behind at suicide and crime scenes, and sleeps in his truck rather than in the bed he used to share with his wife. His son, fifth-grader Whitley (more commonly known as "The Kid"), meanwhile, refuses to believe his mother is dead and vows to remain mute until she returns. This doesn't do him any favors at school, where he's already something of an outcast. As Darby deteriorates, picking fights and pocketing souvenirs from death scenes, the Kid sets up a refuge of his own in a burned out house in their neighborhood. The story is involving and moves easily through material that could smother with treacle, but O'Connor's strong characters—especially the Kid, whose elementary school humiliations are especially well handled—and his ease with conveying their emotions keeps the novel afloat as father and son make small steps toward getting it together.

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  • English

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