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A Wolf at the TableA Memoir of My Father

Augusten Burroughs

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Summary

A Wolf at the Table

By: Augusten Burroughs

Narrarated by: Augusten Burroughs

“As a little boy, I had a dream that my father had taken me to the woods where there was a dead body. He buried it and told me I must never tell. It was the only thing we’d ever done together as father and son, and I promised not to tell. But unlike most dreams, the memory of this one never left me. And sometimes…I wasn’t altogether sure about one thing: was it just a dream?”

When Augusten Burroughs was small, his father was a shadowy presence in his life: a form on the stairs, a cough from the basement, a silent figure smoking a cigarette in the dark. As Augusten grew older, something sinister within his father began to unfurl. Something dark and secretive that could not be named.

Betrayal after shocking betrayal ensued, and Augusten’s childhood was over. The kind of father he wanted didn’t exist for him. This father was distant, aloof, uninterested…

And then the “games” began.

With A Wolf at the Table, Augusten Burroughs makes a quantum leap into untapped emotional terrain: the radical pendulum swing between love and hate, the unspeakably terrifying relationship between father and son. Told with scorching honesty and penetrating insight, it is a story for anyone who has ever longed for unconditional love from a parent. Though harrowing and brutal, A Wolf at the Table will ultimately leave you buoyed with the profound joy of simply being alive. It’s a memoir of stunning psychological cruelty and the redemptive power of hope.

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EDITOR'S PICK // New York Times Best Seller

Total File Size: 253 MB (8 files) Total Length: 9 Hours, 12 Minutes

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Patrick Rapa

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Patrick Rapa writes about books for eMusic, comedy for Cowbell Magazine and music for Philadelphia City Paper. He lives in Philly with this like giant bug he tr...more »

12.02.08
Augusten Burroughs, A Wolf at the Table
2008 | Label: Macmillan Audio

Fans of the dark humor and grim whimsy of Augusten Burroughs’ previous memoirs — the filmified Running With Scissors, the underrated Dry — will be completely, utterly, repeatedly shocked by A Wolf At The Table. It’s still a memoir, the really true truth as Burroughs remembers it, but it’s also a horror story. Good versus evil? Sort of. More like boy versus monster. There’s our young protagonist, a kid starved for attention and barely old enough to understand what he’s up against. And in this corner, his dad, a full-fledged adult covered with bloody sores and fueled by rage, alcohol and erratic, sociopathic cruelty. Burroughs’ slow, deliberate narration — occasionally interspersed by musical interludes from Patti Smith, Ingrid Michaelson, Tegan Quin and Sea Wolf — plays every heartbreak for maximum effect, building the tension, helping you brace yourself for the next time the monster appears out of the fog. Although time and distance have allowed the author to turn his greatest pains into a spellbinding piece of literature, it’s clear he’s never forgiven the physical and psychological abuse he suffered at the hands of his (now deceased) father, or the shame and double-life living that came with it. The sentences drip with anger. The narrator is still seething, grasping for answers. You might quip that Burroughs has written more memoirs than any 40-something has a right to, but this intensely personal book could not exist without the others, and it is his best yet.

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