A Doubter's Almanac: A Novel
A Doubter's Almanac: A Novel book cover

A Doubter's Almanac: A Novel

Paperback – October 25, 2016

Price
$8.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
592
Publisher
Random House Trade Paperbacks
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0812980264
Dimensions
5.28 x 1.25 x 7.97 inches
Weight
14.4 ounces

Description

“551 pages of bliss . . . devastating and wonderful . . . dazzling . . . You come away from the book wanting to reevaluate your choices and your relationships. It’s a rare book that can do that, and it’s a rare joy to discover such a book.” — Esquire “[Ethan Canin] is at the top of his form, fluent, immersive, confident. You might not know where he’s taking you, but the characters are so vivid, Hans’s voice rendered so precisely, that it’s impossible not to trust in the story. . . . ‘It was as though the numerals had been expressly fabricated, like more-perfect words, to elucidate the details of creation,’ Canin writes of Milo’s passion for math, though he might as well be referring to his novel, in which the delicate networks of emotion and connection that make up a family are illuminated, as if by magic, via his prose.” — Slate “Alternately explosive and deeply interior.” — New York (“Eight Books You Need to Read”) “A blazingly intelligent novel.” —Los Angeles Times “[A] beautifully written novel.” — The New York Times Book Review (Editors’ Choice) “A book that raises the bar for novelists.” —Literary Hub “No knowledge of proofs or theorems is required to enjoy Ethan Canin’s excellent eighth novel. He alternately treats math like elegant poetry or infuses it with crackling energy.” — The Christian Science Monitor “Math made beautiful . . . Canin writes with such luxuriant beauty and tender sympathy that even victims of Algebra II will follow his calculations of the heart with rapt comprehension.” — The Washington Post “A masterful writer at his transcendent best.” —BBC “Elegant and devastating . . . A Doubter’s Almanac is exquisitely crafted. Canin takes us readers deep into the strange world of his troubled characters without ever making us aware of the effort involved. . . . An odd and completely captivating novel.” —NPR’s Fresh Air “Dazzlingly ambitious . . . one part intellectual thriller, one part domestic saga.” — The Huffington Post “There is a shimmering loveliness to Canin’s glimpses of higher mathematics. . . . A Doubter’s Almanac is a novel whose achievement is fully equal to the . . . tragedy it portrays. Ethan Canin understands both the allure of great intellectual accomplishment and the price it exacts from those who pursue it. Unlike his protagonist, his own prodigious effort has produced a work of exquisite and enduring beauty.” — Bookreporter “With A Doubter’s Almanac, Canin has soared to a new standard of achievement. What a story, and what a cast of characters. The protagonist, Milo Andret, is a mathematical genius and one of the most maddening, compelling, appalling, and unforgettable characters I’ve encountered in American fiction. This is the story of a family that falls to pieces under the pressure of living with an abundantly gifted tyrant. Ethan Canin writes about mathematics as brilliantly as T. S. Eliot writes about poetry. With this extraordinary novel, Ethan Canin now takes his place on the high wire with the best writers of his time.” —Pat Conroy “Staggeringly ambitious . . . a story of majestic sweep.” —Paste “I have never encountered prose that renders this world so beautifully: the field ceases to be a language and series of figures we don’t understand and becomes a subject for which we have a nearly physical understanding. . . . A Doubter’s Almanac makes clear that no matter how blind we are in some ways, we are still able, in other ways, to see.” — Fiction Writers Review “The book is no apologia for bad behavior, a free pass for genius run amok. Canin has crafted a believable and indelible portrait of a frustrated master intellectual at work. . . . [There are] scenes that erupt with the explosive power of a Eugene O’Neill or Arthur Miller. . . . The life of the gentle, humane Albert Einstein, also once at Princeton, reminds us that not all giants of math and science are monsters. What Ethan Canin reminds us is that, despite everything, Milo Andret, isn’t either.” — Newsday “Masterful . . . a work of impressive ambition, operating on a truly epic scale. Moving across seven decades, it is a tale that exquisitely details the zeniths and nadirs of true genius.” — The Maine Edge “A tremendous literary achievement.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review) “Epic . . . thoroughly absorbing . . . a nuanced, heartbreaking portrait of a tortured mathematician . . . Canin, in translucent prose, elucidates the way a mathematician sees the world and humanity’s own insignificance within it. A harrowing, poignant read about the blessing and curse of genius.” — Booklist (starred review) “Cause for celebration! . . . A fantastic multigenerational novel about a family of geniuses who discover the sometimes painful costs of living with brilliance.” — Book Riot “Extraordinary . . . a spellbinding novel about math.” —Kirkus Reviews “A gem.” —People “This is big, serious, completely involving fiction of a kind rarely written today.” — The Guardian “Canin’s fifth novel is brilliant—it’s the sort of book that used to be called “a major novel”. . . . This is fiction at its most ambitious and seductive—for all its length and intellectual complexity, A Doubter’s Almanac speeds by with effortless grace. On every page Canin’s humane, precise prose offers marvels. A Doubter’s Almanac is fiction as it should be—rich, compassionate, gripping, and true.” —Dublin Sunday Business Post Ethan Canin is the author of seven books, including the story collections Emperor of the Air and The Palace Thief and the novels For Kings and Planets, Carry Me Across the Water, and America America. He is on the faculty of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and divides his time between Iowa and northern Michigan. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. A Late ArrivalFrom the kitchen window, Milo Andret watched the bridge over the creek, and when he saw Earl Biettermann's white Citroën race across the span he hurried out the door and picked up a short hoe. Biettermann was driving too fast. Reckless was the word for it--but that's the way he'd always been. Arrogant. Heedless. Lucky to stumble onto the right roads, the right career, the right woman. Lucky even to be alive. For any other driver, the route from the bridge to the cabin would take five minutes: Andret figured it would take Biettermann three.Outside under the trees, he crossed as quickly as he could toward the garden, his feet today somehow obeying his commands. Next to the strawberries he lowered himself into the folding chair and used the coiled hose to dash a few palmfuls of water onto his shirt and hair. The sun was high. He ought to be sweating.He heard the car throw gravel as it made the turn into the driveway. Then the engine shut off. A fan came on the way it did in French cars. Biettermann probably loved that fan. One door slam. Andret waited.Then, a second.He let them knock at the door to the cabin. His name called: "Professor! Professor!" This was an affectation. Then steps on the cluttered path to the back of the house, where he was bent low over the plants, pulling strenuously at the roots of a marauding false grape."Professor Andret!"He turned to offer his greeting, squinting, wiping the spigot water from his brow. A shock: Earl Biettermann was in a wheelchair. He realized he'd heard something about that. From her, maybe?He couldn't remember.She was here, though--that was the important thing--and now she was guiding her husband in a wheelchair, pushing him in front of her across the bumpy ground like an offering. It could have been awful: but he saw immediately that it wasn't going to be.He also realized with a start that she'd been the one driving.ImpossibleMilo Andret grew up in northern Michigan, near Cheboygan, on the western edge of Lake Huron, where the offshore waters were fathomless and dark. The color of the lake there was closer to the stormy Atlantic hues of Lake Superior than to the tranquil, layered turquoise of Lake Michigan, which lapped at the tourist beaches on the far side of the state. Milo's father had been an officer in the navy during the Second World War, a destroyer's navigator driven by the hope of one day commanding his own ship; but at the age of twenty-four, after an incident in the Solomon Sea, he'd abandoned his ambitions. The incident had occurred in November 1943, just a year before Milo was born. Coming north out of the straits near Bougainville Island, the destroyer had been hit by a string of Japanese torpedoes, and in the wake of the explosions the ship's life rafts had drifted into unknown waters. Milo's father and another sailor had managed to get aboard one of the rafts, and before nightfall they'd picked up two more men. A week later, though, when a British cruiser finally sighted them off of Papua New Guinea, all but Milo's father had been eaten by sharks.By the time Milo was born, his father had been discharged back to Cheboygan, where he'd found work as a science teacher at Near Isle High School. It was a position from which, for the next thirty-nine years, he would neither be offered a promotion nor seek one.Milo's mother had been the first female summa cum laude chemistry major in the history of Michigan State University; but she too was willing to forsake her ambitions. She raised Milo until he was old enough to go to school, and then she found a job as a secretary in the sheriff's department in Alpena, the county seat. In Alpena, she typed reports, brewed coffee, and made mild banter with a generally courteous group of men several years her senior, more than one of whom could neither read nor write.This was most of what Milo knew of the lives of his parents.After school his father graded homework in his office, and after work his mother sometimes stepped out for a drink with a few of the other secretaries from her building. On most afternoons, Milo walked up the hill from the bus stop to an empty house. By now it was the mid-1950s.In those days Cheboygan was already something of a resort town, although Milo didn't realize this fact until he was older. For most of his childhood, he knew only the deep woods that ran behind their property--350 acres of sugar maple, beech, and evergreen that had managed to remain unlogged during the huge timber harvests that had denuded much of the rest of the state. He spent a good part of his days inside this forest. The soil there was padded with a layer of decaying leaves and needles whose scents mingled to form a cool spice in his nose. He didn't notice the smell when he was in it so much as feel its absence when he wasn't. School, home, any building he had to spend time in--they all left him with the feeling that something had been cleaned away.The shaded hollows of his particular tract were populated by raccoons, skunks, opossum, and owls, and by the occasional fox or porcupine. The small meadows were ringed with ancient birches that crashed to the ground when the younger trees crowded them out, their fallen, crisscrossed trunks making shelters and bridges for him to discover. The woods were in transition, his father had told him. When a great tree came down, the report could be heard for miles, a shifting crescendo of rustling and snapping as the trunk yanked away the limbs around it, culminating finally in a muffled thud like a sledgehammer striking moss. Whenever this occurred, Milo would set out to find the corpse. He had an intricate memory of the landscape's light and shade and could tell instantly when even a small piece of it had been altered. Something in his brain picked up disturbance acutely.How many hours he spent in those woods! He was an only child and from early in his life had invented solitary games--long treks into the landscape with certain self-imposed rules (two right turns to every left, exactly a thousand steps from departure to return, the winding brook crossed only where it bent to the west). These games passed the most precious part of the day for him, the too-short interlude between the time the school bus released him at the bottom of the hill and six o'clock, when his mother came out to the edge of the woods holding the lid of a garbage can and banged it three times with a broom handle to call him for dinner.The Andrets lived fifteen miles from the beaches on Lake Huron; but it might as well have been a hundred. His father stayed to the land in a part of the state where everyone else was drawn to the water. This was no doubt attributable to his experience in the Solomon Sea, but Milo was too young to understand something like that. On weekends his father went hunting with his friends or tinkered around the house, or if the weather was poor he sat in a chair by the fire and worked puzzles from a magazine. In the Andret family, there was never any question of shared recreation--no canoe trips, no bicycle rides, no walks together at the shore. Such dalliances were from another universe. There were no pets, either, and no games other than a couple of boxes of playing cards and an old chess set of Philippine ivory that had been brought back from the navy. If Mr. Andret was at home, he was either grading schoolwork or performing household repairs, walking around with a tool belt and setting a ladder against the eaves. He would finish one job and move on to the next, never alerting anyone to what he was doing. If his mother was there, she was in the kitchen, at the small table by the window, with a glass and a book. If Milo wasn't at school, he was in the woods.The Andret house was an old-fashioned, darkly painted, thoroughly ornamented Victorian that had been built by a prosperous farmer at the turn of the century, as though it would one day sit on the main square of a town. It was three stories high with a steeply raftered roof whose scalloped tiles radiated a statuesque formality. But to Milo there was always something disappointing about this formality. From the time he was young it had seemed forlorn to him, like a woman in a ball gown sitting at a bus stop. (This wasn't his own phrase; it was his wife's, uttered many years later, when she first crested the hill.) The walls were an evening blue, both inside and out, and the exterior trim was a deep maroon. Everything a shade too dark. There was a sidewalk in front, but it ended at the property stake. A brass mailbox stood on a post at the head of the driveway, and an exactingly painted garage looked out from buttressed eaves at the rear. The property boasted all the details of a fine residence in a fine little town, except for the town itself, which had never appeared.The Andrets' house was the only one for miles. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER • In this mesmerizing novel, Ethan Canin, the author of
  • America America
  • and
  • The Palace Thief,
  • explores the nature of genius, rivalry, ambition, and love among multiple generations of a gifted family.
  • Milo Andret is born with an unusual mind. A lonely child growing up in the woods of northern Michigan in the 1950s, he gives little thought to his own talent. But with his acceptance at U.C. Berkeley he realizes the extent, and the risks, of his singular gifts. California in the seventies is a seduction, opening Milo’s eyes to the allure of both ambition and indulgence. The research he begins there will make him a legend; the woman he meets there—and the rival he meets alongside her—will haunt him for the rest of his life. For Milo’s brilliance is entwined with a dark need that soon grows to threaten his work, his family, even his existence. Spanning seven decades as it moves from California to Princeton to the Midwest to New York,
  • A Doubter’s Almanac
  • tells the story of a family as it explores the way ambition lives alongside destructiveness, obsession alongside torment, love alongside grief. It is a story of how the flame of genius both lights and scorches every generation it touches. Graced by stunning prose and brilliant storytelling,
  • A Doubter’s Almanac
  • is a surprising, suspenseful, and deeply moving novel, a major work by a writer who has been hailed as “the most mature and accomplished novelist of his generation.”
  • Praise for
  • A Doubter’s Almanac
  • “551 pages of bliss . . . devastating and wonderful . . . dazzling . . . You come away from the book wanting to reevaluate your choices and your relationships. It’s a rare book that can do that, and it’s a rare joy to discover such a book.”
  • Esquire
  • “[Canin] is at the top of his form, fluent, immersive, confident. You might not know where he’s taking you, but the characters are so vivid, Hans’s voice rendered so precisely, that it’s impossible not to trust in the story. . . . The delicate networks of emotion and connection that make up a family are illuminated, as if by magic, via his prose.”
  • Slate
  • “Alternately explosive and deeply interior.”
  • New York
  • (“Eight Books You Need to Read”)
  • “A blazingly intelligent novel.”
  • —Los Angeles Times
  • “[A] beautifully written novel.”
  • The New York Times Book Review
  • (Editors’ Choice)

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(272)
★★★★
25%
(227)
★★★
15%
(136)
★★
7%
(63)
23%
(208)

Most Helpful Reviews

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The Curse of a Masterful Mind

I finished A Doubter’s Almanac (Ethan Canin) several days ago. I liked it a lot, even though there were many, many details I did not understand fully, and many that seemed to me inconsequential to the overall progression of the story. This was a book I will remember, a book that would influence me forever, the way The Life of Pi did. I felt it was of epochal significance, to me at least, because I have always liked books and movies that present/discuss the role and struggle of geniuses. I read parts of the book while on travel through Eastern Europe (which might explain the scenes I found less significant or not clear, having read them while falling asleep in the evening, or in a hurry while waiting for my wife to go to breakfast). I discussed the book with a friend who traveled with us and who was very smart and passionate about artificial intelligence. By nature of his profession he had to understand mathematics. He confessed he wasn’t versed in advanced levels of math (calculus, geometry) where the limits between the three-dimensional world and imagination are blurred and one has to go into the remote abstract that causes most of us to be lost or at best uncomfortable; but he suggested that when he writes code he sees it in his mind, physically, three-dimensionally. Like Mozart writing music, he told me; like Milo Andret, the protagonist in the book. I imagined brightly colored squiggly lines and geometrical figures dancing inside their brains like rainwater shining in the grass. I told my friend I remember Amadeus (the movie) and fear I will always be a Saliery. (Later I thought of other movies on similar subjects, in particular Good Will Hunting; the moment Matt Damon humiliates his math mentor by telling him how easy it had been to solve a particular problem that had preoccupied the entire math department for years, or when he answers Robin Williams’ question about whether he had any friends by spitting out with machine gun rhythmicity names of philosophers and writers so great and influential that my mouth fell open, unable to repeat their names after him, let alone read them, understand them and consider them my friends.)

What I liked in the book was the three-generation family drama. It often touched me to the core. I liked the conflict between the despicable personality of Milo Andret and the inexplicable desire as a reader to root for him. I liked the dialogue and the descriptions of nature. I liked the simple (because I could understand them) examples of how the mind of genius mathematicians work, like being able to multiply three three-digit numbers in their heads, or outthinking a computer, or the fact that at age 28 they are already too old, or that a real mathematician could read and master how to use Fortran, Pascal and C++ during a single overnight flight from New York to Stockholm. I went on line and checked out a few of the names of mathematicians referenced in the book and felt lost right away in trying to understand their theories and contributions (while I pride myself with having liked advanced algebra and calculus in high school and college, I couldn’t understand the first thing about their mathematical formulae).

All in all, the book taught me humility.

I read an interview with the author, by Clifton Spargo in The Huffington Post. By profession, Ethan is a physician. He went to Harvard Medical School. The Malosz conjuncture is his invention. It took him seven years to write the novel and he went through eleven drafts. That brings it closer to me – makes it possible. I like to find out that the others struggle as well to get things done, to get novels finished, to bring things as close to perfection as possible.

A brilliant book about the mind and miserable life of a brilliant mathematician.
3 people found this helpful
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Started off fine but then I wanted to shake every one of them...

As somebody else wrote, deliver me from books about tortured genius that is supposed to give them carte blanche to be complete and total jerks to their spouses, children, and co-workers, all of whom keep coming back again and again for more opportunities to be treated like appliances and then feel noble while they are being lied to, yelled at, hit or worse.. Some things, repeated for a life time, are not to be forgiven. Well written, it had its moments, but thank you, no. Go read something else.
2 people found this helpful
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so I know a good book when I read it

I am an avid reader, so I know a good book when I read it. This book is in my top 5. It will make you think about your own family and yourself in new ways. I like it so much, I also bought it for my brother. Enjoy!
2 people found this helpful
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surprised myself by the 5-star rating I just clicked...

This is a hefty book, not only of page count but also of prose; dense with mathematical references you'll either glance past like the final few exhibits of a museum with a growling stomach or grapple with faintly until you lose the stomach for such an inevitably-hopeless fight.

You'll also read a lot about one stomach in particular, towards the end, that will make you wish you hadn't...

This preamble aside, "A Doubter's Almanac" is, above all else, memorable--in creating a character who will resonate beyond your reading, and in creating a mathematical language that serves the novel's theme brilliantly. The ambition of this novelist is nearly as implausible as the main character's, and that is the beauty within its pages: even in its failures, it is style paralleling substance. Canin the writer is Milo the mathematician, stubborn and destined to repeat himself in a chain that inexplicably lasts.

It was not until the final fifth of this book that I decided it merited 5 stars, the first book of that quality I've rated in a good while. It was an exhausting, perilous read--but one I cannot recommend more, if you're up for the journey.
1 people found this helpful
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Mathematically Interesting

A really engrossing book. I initially purchased it as just a change in style from my usual and was pleasantly surprised.
1 people found this helpful
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A Genius Aloholic Bastard is Still an Alcoholic Bastard

Take a young boy who turns out to have a particular genius for mathematics and have him be raised next to the woods by two distant parents one of whom is a steady drinker and what do you get? That's right, a socially unhinged, mathematically obsessed alcoholic. While his thoughts are interesting, his demented personality and the repeated enabling activity of various women who are somehow inexplicably attracted to him makes for a very challenging read. Canin is an excellent writer and the settings are well described, but even a genius needs to be a little more rounded to be an alluring protagonist of a lengthy novel.
1 people found this helpful
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Disappointment

I have read other books by this author and consider him to be one of America's best. I did not like this novel or it's central premise-a gifted mathematician solves a seemingly impossible question, receives accolades, and tries to solve another one. By the character's own admission, his work was for himself and not to further any humanitarian goal or even to further the field of mathematics. During the course of his life, the character engages in reckless and dangerous behavior and ultimately spends his days drinking while pretending to solve this problem. His wife and children, however, spend their time trying to get his approval and recognition and spend their time enabling and taking care of him. I didn't get anything from this book except sorrow and disgust at what this self -centered human did to those in contact with him.
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Disappointing and overworked

I bought this due to some of the reviews and regretted my purchase. It has the feeling of an overworked MFA short story that tries to capture something real but fails at pulling it off and instead comes off as a bit cheap and stereotypical. The writing itself is decent enough but the entire story just didn't work for me. I looked forward to reading this but found it to be one of the most overrated books I've read so far in 2020.
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Worse than expected

I just expected more. I dragged on for forever. By the second half of the book I was like my gosh where can this even go from here. I guess it was pretty good. I consider myself a person that likes math, but this book discusses math in a way that I had never thought of before which I guess was good to get a new perspective. I can’t think of a single one of my friends I would recommend this book to but it wasn’t awful.
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Beautifully written account of a disfunctional family

Beautifully written account of a disfunctional family. The main characters were unlikable and tiresome. Character development was excellent, following the main character's growth, or nongrowth, from boyhood until adulthood. There was too much math information, from the names of prominent mathematicians to their works. Too much detail. I almost put it down except it was so highly rated I thought I would stick it out. Can't say I'm glad I finished it. I liked the way it ended although the novel was too depressing.