Hardcover
304 Pages, 6.25 x 9.5 x 1 in
October 2, 2007
Random House UK
184655120X
9781846551208
From the Publisher
An utterly contemporary and deeply thought-provoking novel which
addresses the profound unease of countless people in modern
democracies around the world.
An eminent, seventy-two-year-old Australian writer is invited to
contribute to a book entitled Strong Opinions. It is a chance to
air some urgent concerns. He writes short essays on the origins of
the state, on Machiavelli, on anarchism, on Al-Qaida, on
intelligent design, on music. What, he asks, is the origin of the
state and the nature of the relationship between citizen and state?
How should the citizen of a modern democracy react to the state's
willingness to set aside moral considerations and civil liberties
in its war on terror, a war that includes the use of torture? How
does the state handle outsiders?
In the laundry-room of his apartment block he encounters an
alluring young woman. When he discovers she is between jobs he
claims failing eyesight and offers her work typing up his
manuscript. Anya has no interest in politics but the job provides a
distraction, as does the writer's evident and not unwelcome
attraction toward her.
Her boyfriend, Alan, an investment consultant who understands the
world in harsh neo-liberal economic terms, has reservations about
his trophy girlfriend spending time with this 1960s throwback.
Taking a lively interest in his affairs, Alan begins to formulate a
plan.
Diary of a Bad Year is an utterly contemporary
work of fiction from one of our greatest writers and deepest
thinkers. It addresses the profound unease of countless people in
democracies across the world.
About the Author
J.M. Coetzee's work includes Waiting For The
Barbarians, The Life & Times of Michael
K, Boyhood: Scenes From Provincial Life,
Youth, Disgrace and, most
recently, Slow Man. He was the first author to win
the Booker Prize twice and was awarded the Nobel Prize for
Literature in 2003.