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The Caretaker

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Following the death of a renowned and eccentric collector—author of Stuff, a seminal philosophical work on the art of accumulation—the fate of the privately endowed museum he cherished falls to a peripatetic stranger who had been his fervent admirer. This peculiar institution (the Society for the Preservation of the Legacy of Dr. Charles Alexander Morgan) is dedicated to the annihilation of hierarchy. A priceless Dürer and other peerless antiquities commune happily with a toothbrush, a plastic coffee cup lid, and the rest of the ignored, the discarded, the undervalued and the valueless.

The caretaker, a restless devotee of Dr. Morgan's work, believes he has landed the job of his dreams. But as the years go by and the lines of identity begin to blur, the caretaker learns he must pay a terrible price to inhabit Morgan's home, his history, and the remnants of his life.

The Caretaker is a profound, probing novel with the momentum and tension of a thriller and is, in the words of Publishers Weekly, an "unnerving feat of contemporary postmodernism."

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Alan Cumming is a natural fit for the meticulous narrative of Doon Arbus. His voice matches the erudite, cerebral drama perfectly. Listeners are eased into the world of philosopher Charles Morgan, author of a book entitled STUFF, who dies and leaves behind a museum of his many collected items. The board hires an eccentric caretaker who presides over the museum and its visitors with increasingly concerning behavior--which culminates in "the incident." Cumming does not disappoint: Listeners may find themselves lost among the museum's artifacts, but Cumming embodies the spirit of the caretaker and centers us with his unfailing confidence. Matching the energy of the story, Cumming gives another stellar performance. S.P.C. © AudioFile 2020, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 27, 2020
      Arbus’s sly debut novel (after Diane Arbus: A Chronology, a coauthored collection of her mother’s diary entries) explores the insular world of the late Dr. Charles Alexander Morgan—collector, chemist, philosopher, philanthropist, and all-around eccentric—whose legacy, consisting of hundreds of items ranging from seashells and coat hangers to a portrait by Albrecht Dürer and Morgan’s seminal masterpiece entitled simply Stuff, is overseen by a devoted and unnamed caretaker. The labyrinthine Morgan Foundation is a repository of strange and unusual objects, through which the slavishly devoted caretaker leads curious tourists and would-be specialists. When the crown of Morgan’s collection—a black plinth forged by a crashed meteorite—is damaged by a guest and the caretaker’s lectures begin to take on a devious, increasingly unbalanced subtext, the reader begins to wonder whether the Foundation’s visitors really are the caretaker’s charges—or are they his prisoners? Arbus brilliantly describes the caretaker’s distorted sense of the museum as a living, breathing organism (“the whole place has come alive again and has found its voice and is chattering away in its native language to the solitary listener”), and flirts just enough with gothic tropes to dramatize his existential dilemma. Taking cues from tales by Kafka and Robert Walser, Arbus pulls off an unnerving feat of contemporary postmodernism.

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  • English

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