Preview
  • A Line Made by Walking

  • By: Sara Baume
  • Narrated by: Heather O'Neill
  • Length: 9 hrs and 40 mins
  • 3.8 out of 5 stars (78 ratings)

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A Line Made by Walking

By: Sara Baume
Narrated by: Heather O'Neill
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Publisher's summary

The author of the award-winning Spill Simmer Falter Wither returns with a stunning new novel about a young artist's search for meaning and healing in rural Ireland.

Struggling to cope with urban life - and life in general - Frankie, a 20-something artist, retreats to her family's rural house on "turbine hill", vacant since her grandmother's death three years earlier. It is in this space, surrounded by countryside and wild creatures, that she can finally grapple with the chain of events that led her here - her shaky mental health, her difficult time in art school - and maybe, just maybe, regain her footing in art and life.

As Frankie picks up photography once more, closely examining the natural world around her, she reconsiders seminal works of art and their relevance. With "prose that makes sure we look and listen" (Atlantic), Sara Baume has written an elegant novel that is as much an exploration of wildness, the art world, mental illness, and community as it is a profoundly beautiful and powerful meditation on life.

©2017 First US Edition © Sara Baume. First published in the Republic of Ireland by Tramp Press in 2017. Published by special arrangement with Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing. (P)2017 Audible, Inc.
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Editorial reviews

Editors Select, April 2017 - Baume's previous novel, Spill Simmer Falter Wither, was a moving and transcendent debut that made her a writer to watch for me. Now, with her follow-up, she's solidified herself as a writer I think we need more than ever - a writer for those of us who, at times, feel lost or worry that they feel things a little too much. Again Baume forgoes a narrative plot for something more meditative, reflective, and ultimately expansive. Swept into her inner monologue, we follow Frankie - a 20-something aspiring artist in the throes of an existential crisis - as she retreats to her dead grandmother's bungalow in rural Ireland to contemplate the meaning and purpose not just of art but of her own life. A truly intimate novel; narrator Heather O'Neill reads with a grace and ache that matches Baume's emotional intelligence and will leave you breathless. Doug, Audible Editor

Critic reviews

"When I finished Sara Baume's new novel I immediately felt sad that I could not send it in the post to the late John Berger. He, too, would have loved it and found great joy in its honesty, its agility, its beauty, its invention. Baume is a writer of outstanding grace and style. She writes beyond the time we live in." (Colum McCann)
"After a remarkable and deservedly award-winning debut, here is a novel of uniqueness, wonder, recognition, poignancy, truth-speaking, quiet power, strange beauty and luminous bedazzlement. Once again, I've been Baumed." (Joseph O'Connor)
"Unflinching, at times uncomfortable, and always utterly compelling, A Line Made by Walking is among the best accounts of grief, loneliness and depression that I have ever read. Every word of it rings true, the truth of hard-won knowledge wrested from the abyss. Shot through with a wild, yearning melancholy, it is nevertheless mordantly witty. It felt, to me, kindred to Olivia Laing's The Lonely City: not just on a superficial level, a young woman seeking solace in art, but in the urgent depth of its quest to understand and articulate what it means to make art, and what art might mean for the individual, lost and lonely; how it might bring us out of, or back to, ourselves." (Lucy Caldwell)

What listeners say about A Line Made by Walking

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Sorry, But This Lacks Elegance...

The joy of literary fiction is that you don't just look through a window, you see the beauty of the glass, the frame, the intent of the artist.
"Spill Simmer Falter Wither" was the most divine look at the world that I'd read/listened to in such a long time. But "A Line Made By Walking" lacks the elegance, the brilliance of sunlight against shadow, the ability to make rust something glorious.
Here, Baume is attempting to make the faded, painful dustiness of depression a work of art, by using some fine prose, by testing it, side-by-side, against other works of art, by trying to capture the fine line between when something is alive, when something is dead.
Frankie, twenty-five and now twenty-six, is a woman wallowing in depression, struggling with mental illness, trying to find her way back to a sturdy casualness with the world. But she's a fractious woman, a woman who is apt to tell the people who love her to f-off, which she does quite often.
I get it. I struggle with debilitating clinical depression and while I find that Baume gets close to a real description of the illness, Frankie's wholeness, if you will, just rings false. "A Line Made By Walking" doesn't even begin to capture the black, the emptiness that other works of fiction do so well.
Lacking too is the beautiful language, word choices, one of a kind figurative phrasing that made her debut book so stunning. Baume seems like she wrote this quickly, trying to get that second book in as part of a two-book deal with her publisher.
While this is a fine enough book and Frankie is a candid person with a nice ability to pick out the details and make decent enough comparisons, the floating-on-the-surface quality of it wasn't enough to engage me flat-out. I put the book away often: not because I wanted to savor each word, as I did with "Spill Simmer Falter Wither", but because I just didn't really care, even when it met its evasive conclusion.
Worth it for the language, but I'd wait for a sale or a Daily Deal...

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13 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Wonderfully descriptive depressed person recovers by the end

Not so easy to spend so much time with s narrator death obsessed and too sad and stubborn for a chemical assist or any other action to feel better, but somehow tricky to follow but perceptible, she does recover. Whew.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Sara Baume is unrivaled.

Exquisite. Heather O'Neill's narration is the perfect choice for Sara Baume's main character. Words fail me. I never wanted it to end - a portrait of clinical depression both heartbreaking and, at times, humorous. Baume's language is masterful and her thought process original. 5 stars are not enough.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars

disappointing - couldn't wait to finish it

a waste of lyrical prose - unbearably self-indulgent story; no progression of plot or character

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1 person found this helpful

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    1 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars

Wow this book was crap

This Was a self indulgent book about a crazy person!! It was horrid! No buy it

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

painful

What a struggle to listen too. The ramblings of a depressed artist. I left the room several times and let it play just to push through it.

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2 people found this helpful

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    1 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars

Pointless ramblings

Plot (if there is one) is swallowed up by the pointless ramblings of an an interesting mind

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    1 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars

Disappointing

I completely enjoyed Spill Simmer Falter Wither and was excited about a new book by the same author. I am sorry to say that I was disappointed. The story is about a depressed young woman who never gets better. The only hopeful part is her understanding mother. I listened to the end but there was no redemption. Sorry I can’t say anything positive.

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