The Floating World: A Novel

The Floating World: A Novel

by C. Morgan Babst

Narrated by Christa Lewis

Unabridged — 13 hours, 31 minutes

The Floating World: A Novel

The Floating World: A Novel

by C. Morgan Babst

Narrated by Christa Lewis

Unabridged — 13 hours, 31 minutes

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Overview

A dazzling debut about family, home, and grief, The Floating World takes listeners into the heart of Hurricane Katrina with the story of the Boisdorés, whose roots stretch back nearly to the foundation of New Orleans. Though the storm is fast approaching the Louisiana coast, Cora, the family's fragile elder daughter, refuses to leave the city, forcing her parents, Joe Boisdoré, an artist descended from a freed slave who became one of the city's preeminent furniture makers, and his white “Uptown” wife, Dr. Tess Eshleman, to evacuate without her, setting off a chain of events that leaves their marriage in shambles and Cora catatonic-the victim or perpetrator of some violence mysterious even to herself.



This mystery is at the center of C. Morgan Babst's haunting, lyrical novel. Cora's sister, Del, returns to New Orleans from the life she has tried to build in New York City to find her hometown in ruins and her family deeply alienated from one another. As Del attempts to figure out what happened to her sister, she must also reckon with the racial history of the city, and the trauma of destruction that was not, in fact, some random act of God, but an avoidable tragedy visited upon New Orleans's most helpless and forgotten citizens.

Editorial Reviews

FEBRUARY 2018 - AudioFile

Christa Lewis sensitively narrates this post-Katrina story of a married couple, their two adult children, and their paternal grandfather. They’re disconnected by marital discord, dementia, and trauma as they reunite in New Orleans to face the burden of rebuilding their homes and their lives. Lewis makes each character’s grief and guilt palpable through her delivery of dialogue and vivid descriptions. Each character speaks in a distinctive Southern cadence. Cora, the daughter who defiantly stayed behind, speaks little, though Lewis makes her fragile presence weighty. Lewis also brings forth the burdens that Joe and Tess, Cora’s parents, carry with a subtle slowness in her voice. Overall, Lewis masterfully presents a placid story, in which tragedy lurks below the water level. M.P.P. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

08/14/2017
Babst’s tightly written debut focuses on the fractured Boisdoré clan, whose familial tensions are brought to a head in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Six weeks after the storm, Joe, an absent-minded furniture maker separated from his wife, Tess, a psychologist and the breadwinner, moves in with his father, Vincent, who has dementia. Tess and Joe split because she is furious with him for failing to rescue their daughter, stubborn 28-year-old Cora, from New Orleans after she refused to evacuate. Their other child, Del, returns home after having suddenly lost her job in New York to find Cora in a near-catatonic state. Cora, who has a history of mental illness, went through an experience during the storm that left her traumatized. After Del discovers a body in a house where Cora weathered part of Katrina, Del and Cora become increasingly convinced that Cora may be responsible. As the sisters try to figure out who committed the crime, Babst skillfully makes the reader feel Del’s desperate fears about Cora and the sisters’ frustrations with their elders. She’s also adept at pitting Tess’s pushy nature against Joe’s more passive tendencies. Despite a discordant ending, this is a riveting novel about the inescapable pull of family. (Oct.)

From the Publisher

“Set in New Orleans, this important and powerful novel follows the Boisdoré family . . . in the months after Katrina. A profound, moving and authentically detailed picture of the storm’s emotional impact on those who lived through it.”
People

"C. Morgan Babst's portrait of a troubled New Orleans family that fractures further during and after Hurricane Katrina is poetic and suspenseful . . . an ambitious novel."
—NPR.org

“This is a spot-on examination of race and the tumult natural disasters leave in their wake.”
Marie Claire

“This powerful family drama (with a mystery at its core) promises to be an emotional read. A dazzling debut about family, home, and grief, The Floating World takes readers into the heart of Hurricane Katrina with the story of the Boisdorés, whose roots stretch back nearly to the foundation of New Orleans.”
Paste Magazine

“This unforgettable and timely novel tells the story of those who lost everything in the hurricane and the lives they sought to rebuild.”
RealSimple.com

“In the wake of hurricanes Harvey and Irma, Babst's mystery about a southern family dealing with the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina—and a mentally ill family member who opted to stay behind during the storm—is oddly prescient.”
InStyle.com

“Set in New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, this wrenching and hypnotic book will give you chills with its descriptions of the flooding.”
Bustle

“As hurricane victims begin the arduous process of recovering and rebuilding their communities, The Floating World offers a fictional, but very real, example of the struggles they’ll face. What becomes of those harmed by natural disasters after the news cameras leave and attention is diverted to the next human crisis? That’s the question at the center of The Floating World, a book that will surely give its readers empathy for all those who are putting their lives back together.”
BitchMedia

The Floating World is a beautiful novel that speaks profoundly to the current moment.”
Chicago Review of Books

“This debut novel . . . is the Katrina story that still needs to be told.”
Birmingham Magazine

 “The Floating World is the Katrina story that needed to be told, one with a piercing, unforgettable loveliness and a nuanced understanding of this particular place and its tangled past.”
Deep South Magazine

“A soulful inquiry of race, class, and family in the dawn of trauma, The Floating World doesn’t just look into the eye of such a devastating storm. The storm itself becomes the lens through which the Boisdorés begin to see the world more clearly. Through it, we see what loyalty truly looks like—the impossible choice to stay or leave, the terrorizing heartbreak of return—and the cost of what we hold onto, what we must release in order to survive.”
—Ploughshares

“With a gripping yet deliberate narrative infused with vivid descriptions, Babst takes her time with this story, allowing it to build slowly and methodically with an appropriate weight, enhancing the confusion wrought by the storm. In contrast, Cora's point of view significantly intensifies the pace, lending an urgency to the novel and making her narrative feel almost cyclonic. A native of New Orleans who evacuated one day before Hurricane Katrina, Babst has an intimate understanding and knowledge of the region's people and rich culture, its topography and the complex forces of race and class. The result is in a timely debut novel about the power of nature and its omnipresent potential for destruction in every aspect of our lives.”
Shelf Awareness

“Reminiscent of Jonathan Franzen’s The Corrections, The Floating World is also a meditation on kinship and family history. Babst’s novel is an invaluable record of that social devastation—and a warning of the devastations like Harvey to come.”
BookPage

“[A] powerful, important novel . . . This novel is New Orleans to the bone, an authentic, detailed picture of the physical and emotional geography of the city, before, during, and after the tragedy, its social strata, its racial complications, the zillion cultural details that define its character: the parrots in the palm trees, the pork in the green beans, the vein in the shrimp, ‘the goddamned tacky way he flew his Rex flag out of season.’ Deeply felt and beautifully written; a major addition to the literature of Katrina.”
Kirkus Reviews, starred review

“Babst’s tightly written debut focuses on the fractured Boisdoré clan, whose familial tensions are brought to a head in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina . . . this is a riveting novel about the inescapable pull of family.”
Publishers Weekly

“A richly written, soak-in-it kind of book . . . The mystery of what really happened unfolds with breath-holding poignancy throughout the shifting narrative . . . Utterly affecting.”
Library Journal, starred review

The Floating World is a thought-provoking story of class and race and trauma, told through the dramatic prism of Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath. Babst’s sentences are so fresh and alive they leap off the page. This is a beautiful and captivating book.”
—Jessica Shattuck, NYT bestselling author of The Women in the Castle

“This book is an achingly precise diagram of a city and family in heartbreak. Babst’s writing is fluid and insidious and hauntingly beautiful. The Boisdorés join some of the great families of American fiction, fascinating kinfolk through whom we watch the rise and fall and rise of New Orleans.”
—Kaitlyn Greenidge, author of We Love You, Charlie Freeman 

“In The Floating World, C. Morgan Babst masterfully, hauntingly, evokes the devastated and devastating landscape of post-Katrina New Orleans with images that are at once surreal and painfully real.”
—Helen Phillips, author of The Beautiful Bureaucrat
 
“This is a rich and powerful novel, satisfying on many levels--wry, eloquent, passionate, and completely memorable.”
Valerie Martin, author of Property and The Ghost of Mary Celeste
 
“In powerfully lyrical prose, Morgan Babst evokes the shattered lives strewn in the wake of the levee collapses that left New Orleans in ruins. It’s a story still difficult to believe--even by those of us who lived through it.”
—John Biguenet, author of The Rising Water Trilogy
 
“This powerful and lyrical novel captures the emotional currents in New Orleans after Katrina. With an authentic and sensitive voice, Morgan Babst explores family, race, class, and the essence of disruption.”
—Walter Isaacson, bestselling author of Steve Jobs

Library Journal

★ 08/01/2017
A richly written, soak-in-it kind of book, Babst's debut takes us to New Orleans in the days after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, revealing the consequences for one beleaguered family. Descended from a freed slave and son of a cabinetmaker whom he's caring for assiduously, artist Joe Boisdoré is married to Dr. Tess Eshleman, a white woman from New Orleans high society, and their fraying marriage is totally upended when older daughter Cora refuses to evacuate as Katrina approaches. Cora survives but fears she has done something terrible, and the mystery of what really happened unfolds with breath-holding poignancy throughout the shifting narrative. Meanwhile, Tess links up with past friends while accusing Joe of cowardice for failing to rescue Cora, and younger daughter Del, home from New York, remains crusty with her parents but acts boldly to help her sister. In the end, the hurricane doesn't so much change these people as send them down paths they were already starting to walk, if not always happily, so that finally they live up to the book's last sentence, "I'm home." VERDICT Now you'll know what it was like to have survived Katrina. Occasionally overly detailed but utterly affecting. [See Prepub Alert, 5/22/17.]—Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal

FEBRUARY 2018 - AudioFile

Christa Lewis sensitively narrates this post-Katrina story of a married couple, their two adult children, and their paternal grandfather. They’re disconnected by marital discord, dementia, and trauma as they reunite in New Orleans to face the burden of rebuilding their homes and their lives. Lewis makes each character’s grief and guilt palpable through her delivery of dialogue and vivid descriptions. Each character speaks in a distinctive Southern cadence. Cora, the daughter who defiantly stayed behind, speaks little, though Lewis makes her fragile presence weighty. Lewis also brings forth the burdens that Joe and Tess, Cora’s parents, carry with a subtle slowness in her voice. Overall, Lewis masterfully presents a placid story, in which tragedy lurks below the water level. M.P.P. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2017-08-03
A New Orleans family is shattered and scattered by Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath."Grief was infinite, though, wasn't it," thinks one of the characters midway through this powerful, important novel, "something like love that, divided, did not diminish." Babst's debut tracks the experiences of five family members from the pre-Katrina evacuation of the city through late November 2005, 93 days after landfall. Dr. Tess Eshleman is a psychiatrist, an Uptown blue blood married to Joe Boisdoré, a Creole sculptor descended from freed slaves whose work has made it as far as the Guggenheim; the couple raised their two mixed-race daughters in a historic house on the Esplanade. By the time the hurricane drops a magnolia tree through the roof of that home, Tess and Joe have evacuated to Houston, taking with them Joe's father, who suffers from advanced Lewy body dementia and was in an institution until it shut down for the storm. Their daughter Cora, who struggles with mental illness and depression, refused to leave with the family, then cannot be found when they return. By the time their other daughter, Del, arrives from New York City in October, the pressures of the storm have driven Tess and Joe to separate—and though Cora has been found, drinking tea with an elderly friend of the family in the ruins of her garden, she is catatonic. Much of the plot is devoted to unpacking exactly what happened to her during the storm and the flood. This novel is New Orleans to the bone, an authentic, detailed picture of the physical and emotional geography of the city, before, during, and after the tragedy, its social strata, its racial complications, the zillion cultural details that define its character: the parrots in the palm trees, the pork in the green beans, the vein in the shrimp, "the goddamned tacky way he flew his Rex flag out of season." Deeply felt and beautifully written; a major addition to the literature of Katrina.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940170156443
Publisher: HighBridge Company
Publication date: 10/17/2017
Edition description: Unabridged
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