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Likeness
- Fathers, Sons, a Portrait
- Narrated by: David Macfarlane
- Length: 7 hrs and 37 mins
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Publisher's Summary
When the worst that can happen, happens, the only useful lesson is the knowledge that it can. That's the takeaway: A world can actually end, time can actually run out, sadness can prevail. But I didn't know that then....
From one of Canada's most celebrated writers and the author of the classic memoir The Danger Tree comes an occasionally hilarious, sometimes heart-breaking meditation on love, memory, and the fathomless depths of grief.
Likeness is a multigenerational story told through the vehicle of a painting, a portrait of Macfarlane by the well-known Canadian artist John Hartman. The painting has ended up unexpectedly, temporarily, and enormously in Macfarlane's living room. He looks at it - a lot. It's hard to avoid.
To Macfarlane's surprise, the painting becomes a portal - not only into his own past, but into his father's, too. Through these two histories is woven the present - one dominated by illness. Macfarlane's son undergoes treatment for leukemia during the time the painting hangs in the family living room. Blake is a young man rich in creative possibility. There is music to be composed. There are films to be made. But Blake's future is as circumscribed by fate as his father's was wide open. A tragic difference, eloquently noted.
Likeness can be very funny. But it is also inescapably, achingly sad. A book of transcendent beauty, Likeness demonstrates the power of memory to transform the tragic into the precious and profound.
Critic Reviews
"David Macfarlane's haunting new memoir Likeness...unfolds in a series of short musings, most of them only a few pages in length, which range freely over the span of decades, encompassing three lives.... Likeness is a book of considerable joy, and of staggering loss, one which avoids easy sentimentality in favour of genuine - and crushing - emotion." (Toronto Star)
"A gifted and admired writer across genres.... Macfarlane's works have always focused on memory and family. That long-standing theme is understandably far more sorrowful in Likeness. Born out of the fatal illness of Macfarlane's 29-year-old son, Blake, in 2018, it conveys grief in heartbreaking, often quietly stunning, prose.... There is an ache in Likeness that cuts as deeply as it does because of the beauty of its expression." (Maclean's)
"As soon as you turn the first page into David Macfarlane's Likeness, you are gone, deep into the nest of his effortless story-telling, as the story moves from a painting to a town to a father to a son, from memory to grief and back again, indelibly mapping as it goes the uncountable but always surprising places and people and histories that make us not just who we are, but that make us each other. An unforgettable book." (Ian Brown, author of Sixty)