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The Study of Animal Languages

By: Lindsay Stern
Narrated by: MacLeod Andrews, Julia Whelan
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Publisher's summary

"An unabashedly smart and affecting portrait of the strains of a marriage." (Ayana Mathis, author of The Twelve Tribes of Hattie)

Meet Ivan and Prue: a married couple - both experts in language and communication - who nevertheless cannot seem to communicate with each other.

Ivan is a tightly wound philosophy professor whose reverence for logic and order governs not only his academic interests, but also his closest relationships. His wife, Prue, is quite the opposite: a pioneer in the emerging field of biolinguistics, she is bold and vibrant, full of life and feeling. Thus far, they have managed to weather their differences. But lately, an odd distance has settled in between them. Might it have something to do with the arrival of the college's dashing but insufferable new writer-in-residence, whose novel Prue always seems to be reading?

Into this delicate moment barrels Ivan's unstable father-in-law, Frank, in town to hear Prue deliver a lecture on birdsong that is set to cement her tenure application. But the talk doesn't go as planned, unleashing a series of crises that force Ivan to finally confront the problems in his marriage, and to begin to fight - at last - for what he holds dear.

A dazzlingly insightful and entertaining novel about the limitations of language, the fragility of love, and the ways we misunderstand each other and ourselves, The Study of Animal Languages marks the debut of a brilliant new voice in fiction.

©2019 Lindsay Stern (P)2019 Penguin Audio
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Critic reviews

NAMED ONE OF THE MOST ANTICIPATED BOOKS OF 2019 BY VANITY FAIR, SOUTHERN LIVING, AND LITHUB

NAMED ONE OF THE MOST ANTICIPATED BOOKS OF FEBRUARY 2019 BY NYLON AND BUSTLE

"Lindsay Stern's astute new novel . . . brilliantly captures the fragility of our emotional bonds, but also their ability to weather difficult terrain." —Nylon

"At a time when communication failures seem to have reached an all-time high, [The Study of Animal Languages is] a reminder that even experts are human, and that we’re all just speaking one awfully confusing animal language." —Vanity Fair,

"Thought-provoking . . . A taut, brainy tale that tracks the breakdown of an academic couple’s marriage while dissecting differences between language and communication, knowledge and truth, madness and inspiration." —Publishers Weekly

What listeners say about The Study of Animal Languages

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Beautiful synthesis of thought and feeling

A book that holds opposites gracefully: funny and sad, philosophical and intimate, painful and hopeful, animal and human, ending and beginning. I love these people. Highly recommended.

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How did I end up with this?

The title must have mislead me. Found this in my library purchased long time ago. I was expecting some treatise on linguistics, but instead got 🤮

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