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A Beautiful Truth
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A Beautiful Truth
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A Beautiful Truth
Ebook308 pages4 hours

A Beautiful Truth

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this ebook

Walt and Judy are deeply in love, but Judy longs for a child. Walt measures all beauty against that of Judy and doesn’t want her eyes to get any sadder. They stay side by side and search for distractions, realizing they may never have a family—when Walt finds an unexpected opportunity in the pages of Life magazine. Soon they are welcoming Looee, born in Sierra Leone, into their home in the hills of Vermont, where they come to regard him as their son. The three of them eventually find their rhythm and settle into their own version of love and life between four walls. Until the night their unique family is changed forever.

Hundreds of miles away, at the Girdish Institute in Florida, a group of chimpanzees has been studied for decades. There is proof that chimps have memories and solve problems, that they can learn language and need friends. They are political, altruistic; they get angry and forgive. Among them is Mr. Ghoul, who has grown up in a world of rivals, sex, and unpredictable loss. As Looee and Mr. Ghoul’s distant but parallel paths through childhood, adolescence, and early middle age converge, a new experience of family is formed.

Told simultaneously from the perspective of humans and chimpanzees, A Beautiful  Truth is an inventive, thrillingly intelligent, and heartfelt novel about parenthood, friendship, loneliness, and strength, about the things we hold sacred as humans and the facts that link us inevitably to a nature we too often ignore.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherPenguin Group
Release dateMar 19, 2013
ISBN9780143188377
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A Beautiful Truth
Author

Colin McAdam

Colin McAdam's novel Some Great Thing won the Amazon Canada First Novel Award and was nominated for the Governor General's Literary Award, the Rogers Writers' Trust Award, the Commonwealth Writers' Prize, and for the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize in the United Kingdom. His second novel, Fall, was shortlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize and awarded the Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Prize. He has written for Harper's and lives in Toronto.

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Reviews for A Beautiful Truth

Rating: 3.5833333333333335 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I received an advanced copy of A Beautiful Truth by Colin McAdam and I've recently finished reading it. While I've never heard of Colin McAdam before now, I am adding his other novels to my never-ending list of books I need to read. McAdam is the author of two other novels: Fall and Some Great Thing (a finalist for the 2004 Governor General's Literary Award For Fiction). This is an author who can tell a story so riveting that you'll never want to put the book down!A Beautiful Truth is a wonderful story about a couple who adopts a young chimpanzee after finding out that they are unable to have children. Told in alternating points of view, A Beautiful Truth is about a chimpanzee named Looee's life as an adopted son and as a member of the Girdish Institute, where he eventually ends up after a devastating incident.McAdam uses both human and chimpanzee perspectives, managing to capture a realistic experience of the chimps in a human world, as well as their humanlike existence both in a family setting and in a scientific facility. I was touched by the story and quickly fell in love with Looee, whose love for his parents and his struggle to fit into a human world is both tragic and heartwarming. McAdam does a wonderful job of writing the narratives of the chimps; it feels very primal and realistic.The book does contain some violence and has a graphic nature, but these scenes are so important to the readers' understanding of the chimpanzees that the shock factor of some of the scenes and horrifying treatment of the chimps at Girdish does not detract from the narrative. Animal lovers will find this book illuminating and interesting, sad, but also beautiful and heartwarming. The narrative pulls you into the complicated lives of these intelligent creatures and explores the love between family and friends, and human and beast. The book feels well-researched and is [without question] well-written.My only complaint is that I wanted a little more closure on the lives of Walt and Judy (Looee's adoptive human parents) after Looee is moved to Girdish. I really enjoyed reading this book from Penguin Canada and I strongly recommend that you pick up a copy come March 19th! McAdam's novel is different from a lot of animal-centered stories and is unique in its narrative and plot. It's edgy, captivating, and insightful. This is truly a reading experience that you do not want to miss.A Beautiful Truth is a story about beautiful, yet sometimes uncomfortable truths about the relationship between humans and chimps; how we're different, how we're the same, and how we both crave love, friendship and acceptance.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    When I first read the synopsis of A Beautiful Truth by Colin McAdam I didn't think the book would appeal to me at all. As time passed and the novel developed a good reputation among critics and readers, I decided I would have to give it a shot. I was able to view an electronic copy through gracious permission of the publisher, Soho Press, on NetGalley.

    This book fascinated me, and I urge fellow readers to make sure not to miss this one. It's a truly original novel; McAdam experiments liberally with form as he attempts to describe life within an animal community in the first person. His attempts in this vein are by and large successful -- at least judging by this reader's intense engagement with the story and its consistent achievement of personal emotional resonance. I related to these creatures and cared deeply about what happened to them as individuals.

    This novel is like no other; I couldn't put it down because it was such an interesting story idea that was carried out brilliantly. This book is truly an exciting read -- in terms of plot as well as stylistic innovation. You can't say the novel is stagnating as an art form once you read this!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Looee, a chimp raised by a well-meaning and compassionate human couple who cannot conceive a baby of their own, is forever set apart. He's not human, but with his peculiar upbringing he is no longer like other chimps. One tragic night Looee's two natures collide and their unique family is forever changed. At the Girdish Institute in Florida, a group of chimpanzees has been studied for decades. The work at Girdish has proven that chimps have memories and solve problems, that they can learn language and need friends, and that they build complex cultures. They are political, altruistic, get angry, and forgive. When Looee is moved to the Institute, he is forced to try to find a place in their world. " A Beautiful Truth " exposes the yearnings, cruelty, and resilience of all great apes. Summary HPLHaving listened to the audiobook version and then read the hard copy, I would have to say that only the audio can deliver the full impact of A BEAUTIFUL TRUTH. McAdam, like Hemingway, fills the white space between the period of one sentence and the capital of the next--with meaning, intent, shifts of mood and unspoken thoughts. I needed the narrator's brief pauses to cue me to the elisions of a story not found in print.As it narrates the life of the chimpanzee, Looee, A BEAUTIFUL TRUTH reins in the storytelling with a taut, stringy syntax. Terse and unemotional, again like Hemingway and featuring more scientific data than is usually found in a novel.I think McAdam wants the reader to recognize him/herself in the apes' behaviour and to realize that human society is founded on ape society. We still follow the same rules: the strongest/most powerful gets the food, the girls and the territory; when the alpha weakens, we are there to take his/her place. But if I've made A BEAUTIFUL TRUTH sound like a treatise, you have only to read the quote posted earlier. It is humorous, poignant, at times painful and sad, but masterfully told. It would be interesting for a book club to read and discuss A BEAUTIFUL TRUTH and WE ARE ALL COMPLETELY BESIDE OURSELVES.8 out 10 Highly recommended to readers interested in animals and their rights, and to fans of good writing.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is a troubling, but good read. It is written from the Primate's point of view as well as the people in very troubling situations. I just finished it, and will think about it for quite a while.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This story about chimpanzees and humans is sad and heartbreaking. Placing human traits onto chimpanzees is unkind and results in disappointments and expectations that we cannot expect an animal to fulfill. But...this is a story and it does tug at the heartstrings and gives insight to the research world and the world of people who want wild animals as their pets. Almost all the characters are sad and lonely and to be pitied, but the bottom line is that the story is told with truth and honesty.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The best part was the way the author expressed things from the chimps' point of view. I love the way he used language to express their thoughts. Sad, though.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    (Fiction, Literary)Set in Vermont and in a Florida primate research facility, this story is told alternately from the point of view of humans, and chimpanzees.A wealthy young couple Walt and Judy, unable to conceive children, adopt a young chimpanzee who enjoys a pampered life with them. Meanwhile, in Florida, chimps have been studied (and more) for decades. These two stories tragically intersect.This is an extremely powerful book that continues to haunt me, though I read it nearly three years ago.I can’t recommend this highly enough.5 stars
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    “A Beautiful Truth,” by Colin McAdam, is an entirely unique fictional experience: it is a poignant literary character study and an uplifting tale of redemption…but the character at the heart of this story is not a human, he is Looee, a chimpanzee. The author takes extraordinary pains not to indulge in anthropomorphisms. In fact, this is the farthest thing imaginable from a genre animal story! Instead, McAdam strives to force the reader to experience life through Looee’s eyes in a completely authentic fashion. By repeatedly interspersing chapters throughout the book told from the point of view of other individual chimpanzees in a group that Looee eventually becomes part of, we get to learn more about, and intimately experience, chimpanzee social culture…albeit in a captive group setting under the watchful eye of primate psychological and social research experts. In the end, we, the readers are transformed by our experience living with and through Looee’s mind as well as the minds of these other chimpanzees. The book covers 28 years in Looee’s life. We follow him from his traumatic capture as an infant in Africa; through the first 14 years of his life in Vermont being raised like a human child by an affluent childless couple; and eventually, through another 14 years as property of the Florida-based Girdish Institute, a scientific primate research facility. Midway through the two halves of Looee’s life—as a fully-grown, 180-pound adult, with extraordinary chimpanzee strength—we witness him do something horrifically violent. What he does is so terrible, it causes his human parents to send him away to the Institute in Florida rather than have him euthanized. At the Institute, Looee endures extreme pain and suffering as a research subject leased out for various pharmaceutical studies. Finally, when funding for medical research using primates dissolves, Looee is transferred to a psychological research study within the same facility. In this new phase of Looee’s life, we observed him being slowly introduced and absorbed into the same group of chimpanzees that we have been reading about in interspersed chapters since the beginning of the book. These chimpanzees, although captive, live with minimal interference from human researchers and caretakers. They are part of a psychological experiment to learn more about chimpanzee behavior and society. In their company, Looee finally learns what it means to let the chimpanzee part of his character develop. Eventually, we readers discover resolution and understanding about Looee’s horrific crimes in Vermont…it is poignantly problematic whether or not Looee has the mental capacity to understand his own redemption and overcome his long lingering guilt. So, did I like this book? Was I happy that I read it? Frankly, the answer is no, I did not like this book, but I am very happy I read it. I hope I can help you understand that contradiction with a few a few more brief paragraphs. First, let me say that this was an extraordinarily difficult, often unpleasant, and sometimes tedious book to read. It was never compelling, but always fascinating. Why do I say these things? Oh my! I could write many pages of reasons, but I do’nt have that kind of space in this review. This is an odd work of (dare I say, experimental) literature by an author who loves to put words together in an unusual fashion for special effect. Often, I had no idea what effect he was trying to elicit. [Overall and in retrospect, the effect was beautiful, but in the moment, the effect was frustrating.] In this book, he ignores some of the regular rules of grammar and punctuation; this interferes with understanding and makes the book difficult to comprehend. [But in his defense, it also forces the reader to reassess the lack of differences between human and simian characters.] I was constantly annoyed by my inability to understand fully what was being communicated on each page. I trudged through the book, reading it carefully and closely, but only comprehending about 90%. I found that annoying and unsettling. [But again, in defense of the author, isn’t that what I’d be feeling if I were a scientific researcher watching a group of chimpanzees and trying to understand their individual and group behavior? And, would’nt it be tedious doing all that observing?] The author invented many words for his simian character; he explains none of them. Readers must infer their meaning from the text and action. I was successful in figuring out only 50% of them. It is obvious that the author has done a great deal of scientific reading, observations, and consulting with chimpanzee behavioral experts and other research personnel. I am a polymath who loves science as much as literature, I’ve read books by most of the expert primatologists he mentions in his acknowledgements and many others he has not mentioned. I’ve always been keenly curious about primate behavior and have probably read more nonfiction and fiction books about this particular subject than most readers. That being said, I believe this book achieves what it sets out to do and I applaud the author for his vision. [I just wish the author had achieved his goal by writing a more pleasant and less frustrating book.]Obviously, this book will not appeal to the general reading public. But, I definitely recommend it to any serious reader who wants to take on the challenge, unique beauty, and frustration of reading it. For me, the book was a transformative experience. If you are interested in animal rights, chimpanzee social and psychological behavior, or experimental literary fiction, this may be your book.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A Beautiful Truthby Colin McAdamTo be published by SOHO Press, September 13, 2013WHO: Louee, a chimpanzee…WHAT: is adopted by a childless couple…WHERE: in Vermont…WHEN: in the early 1970s…WHY: as a sort of surrogate son.HOW: The couple anthropomorphize the primate and inadvertently inculcate a dual nature within Louee.+ Stylistically, A Beautiful Truth is interesting in its use of and reference to language: Dialogue is stripped of quotes and; Pronouns are not necessarily tethered to the subject in the topic sentence of a paragraph. The reader needs to linger a little over each sentence to catch the current of mood that will take him/her to the next point.+ The novel raises some intriguing questions about the nature of primates and the fine line that may exist between humans and apes. The whole of the novel is cut with chapters from various chimps’ points of view, which are written in short truncated sentences; and while the humans’ chapters are more fully developed, the sentence structures themselves are not complex. The near stream of consciousness from both the human and the apes emphasizes the similarities between the primates.+ Humans tend to project human meaning into other orders of animals, and Judy and Walt (the adopting couple) are no different. However, the actions described by the very words that emphasize commonalities, throw into sharp relief the wild nature of non-human animals. Clever bit, that!- The reader needs to work a little to negotiate and hopscotch the atolls of mood and thought as presented as a result of the writing style, making the novel as a whole semantically challenging. OTHER: I received a paperback ARC of A Beautiful Truth (by Colin McAdam) from a publishing industry professional and friend. The ARC was unsolicited but highly recommended. I receive no monies, goods or services in exchange for reviewing the product and/or mentioning any of the persons or companies that are or may be implied in this post.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    So I am not even really sure where to start with A Beautiful Truth. I feel I must have missed something important, something that would have revealed McAdam’s novel as a work of brilliance rather than an awkwardly written take on the movie Rise of The Planet of the Apes.At times I admired a well written phrase or keen observation but mostly I felt the narrative, which is shared between humans and chimps, was cold, distant and arrogant.I thought the plot disjointed, focusing first on Louee’s life with Walter and Judy Ribke, interspersed with the first point of view of a group of chimps housed in a nearby research institute, which then shifts to a biomedical testing facility where Looee is later exiled. McAdams also detours randomly to introduce characters which add little to the story – a politician, a neighbour, a researcher’s girlfriend and then drops them unceremoniously.While I recognise McAdams does make some thoughtful observations about love, communication, and the characteristics of humanity, I feel that substance was sacrificed on the altar of ‘literary’ style.A Beautiful Truth didn’t work for me but reviews are mixed. I would only recommend it to reader’s who have the patience for literary pretension.