Ethan Grout

Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Ethan Grout by Matt Howard, Allen & Unwin
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Matt Howard ISBN: 9781742661742
Publisher: Allen & Unwin Publication: July 1, 2010
Imprint: Murdoch Books Language: English
Author: Matt Howard
ISBN: 9781742661742
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
Publication: July 1, 2010
Imprint: Murdoch Books
Language: English

Ethan Grout realises it's his twenty-seventh birthday when he receives a card from the fitness centre he recently quit. He's also just quit the no-hoper job he's held for ten years, a week before his father Markus's funeral. Markus's last words of advice had been: 'Ethan live it, buddy - live your life.' How difficult can that be? His dad had worked in film and travelled the world, which meant that, as a child, Ethan roamed an empty house in the suburbs, pretending a family surrounded him. Now, Ethan's home is a tiny room above a busy city bar. It feels good to come home to a place with so much life in it; the buzz and lights of downstairs and the street sooth Ethan to sleep far better than silence ever could. With a new life awaiting him, but with no specific plan, Ethan takes a new job and then another, and even another, on the lookout for anything that might stick. Along the way he creates his own gang of misfits: from Joy, who became his step-mother just a month before his father died; to her super-model son Travis, an innocent in a vacuous business; to the mercurial Alejandra who makes Ethan's first and then his last new job almost bearable.

A bittersweet novel, Ethan Grout portrays the life of a young man who collects a life as he goes, creating his own kind of community when being alone just won't do any more.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Ethan Grout realises it's his twenty-seventh birthday when he receives a card from the fitness centre he recently quit. He's also just quit the no-hoper job he's held for ten years, a week before his father Markus's funeral. Markus's last words of advice had been: 'Ethan live it, buddy - live your life.' How difficult can that be? His dad had worked in film and travelled the world, which meant that, as a child, Ethan roamed an empty house in the suburbs, pretending a family surrounded him. Now, Ethan's home is a tiny room above a busy city bar. It feels good to come home to a place with so much life in it; the buzz and lights of downstairs and the street sooth Ethan to sleep far better than silence ever could. With a new life awaiting him, but with no specific plan, Ethan takes a new job and then another, and even another, on the lookout for anything that might stick. Along the way he creates his own gang of misfits: from Joy, who became his step-mother just a month before his father died; to her super-model son Travis, an innocent in a vacuous business; to the mercurial Alejandra who makes Ethan's first and then his last new job almost bearable.

A bittersweet novel, Ethan Grout portrays the life of a young man who collects a life as he goes, creating his own kind of community when being alone just won't do any more.

More books from Allen & Unwin

Cover of the book Bush Birthday by Matt Howard
Cover of the book Bourke Street Bakery: Breads by Matt Howard
Cover of the book Nanny Confidential by Matt Howard
Cover of the book Dame Joan Hammond by Matt Howard
Cover of the book How's school? by Matt Howard
Cover of the book Recovering from Multiple Sclerosis by Matt Howard
Cover of the book Troubled Waters by Matt Howard
Cover of the book Don't Tell Mum I Work on the Rigs...She Thinks I'm a Piano Player in a Whorehouse by Matt Howard
Cover of the book Conquering Incontinence by Matt Howard
Cover of the book Tuning Out by Matt Howard
Cover of the book The Really Useful Ultimate Student Cookbook by Matt Howard
Cover of the book Finding Sanity by Matt Howard
Cover of the book Kitchen Coquette by Matt Howard
Cover of the book The Food I Love: Breakfast by Matt Howard
Cover of the book Fieldwork in the Human Services by Matt Howard
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy