Category: General Fiction, Political, Short Story
Language: EnglishKeywords: Satire
Written by Lionel Shriver
Read by Andrew Baguley
Format: MP3
Bitrate: 128 Kbps
Released as a Scribd Original (now Everand Original)
From the irrepressibly provocative author of the novels We Need to Talk About Kevin, So Much for That, and The Mandibles: A Family, 2029â2047, comes a searing story of a self-described âterrible man.â
Dan Lancaster loves his wife, Genevieve, and what Genevieve wants she gets. She wants a baby, and, despite Danâs reservations, she gets oneâBroderick, a name chosen by Dan for its grown-upnessâbut, tragically, their son may never grow up. Afflicted by a progressively debilitating disorder, he is deaf, blind, subject to seizures, and unable to breathe without the aid of a ventilator. The medical authorities of Britainâs National Health Service, judging the case hopeless, recommend that the newborn be removed from life support, but Genevieve wonât hear of it, and the battle over the fate of Baby Broderick begins. Itâs waged in courtrooms andâcourtesy of a ceaselessly plugged-in, hypervigilant mediaâin the court of public opinion, which is decidedly on the side of the mother and father deciding if and when anyone pulls the plug. But what Danâs crusading wife doesnât knowâwhat heâs hiding from her and from everyoneâis that he agrees with the NHS doctors; he wants to see their son put out of his misery. To confess this, however, would be to risk losing, even infuriating, their legions of supporters (not to mention the money suddenly pouring in from crowdfunding sites for the childâs treatment). It might also reveal Danâs gnawing suspicion that his wife is acting as much out of maternal instinct as from a compulsive competitiveness: Sheâs driven to win, no matter the cost to their child and, indeed, to their marriage.
Based in part on a true story that divided Britain, this satiric and moving story asks who we can trust to care for the most fragile among us, particularly when a mother and father donât agree about the course of that care or, more fundamentally, agree about what life is, and how love is expressed and honored. What can any of us do when thoughtful discussion, any bid for compromise, is drowned out by a public whose reflex for outrage keeps our conflict-rich, headline-hungry, social-media-addled culture as robust as poor Baby Broderick is not and may never be?
March 31 2020
50 mins
Released as a Scribd Original (now Everand Original)
From the irrepressibly provocative author of the novels We Need to Talk About Kevin, So Much for That, and The Mandibles: A Family, 2029â2047, comes a searing story of a self-described âterrible man.â
Dan Lancaster loves his wife, Genevieve, and what Genevieve wants she gets. She wants a baby, and, despite Danâs reservations, she gets oneâBroderick, a name chosen by Dan for its grown-upnessâbut, tragically, their son may never grow up. Afflicted by a progressively debilitating disorder, he is deaf, blind, subject to seizures, and unable to breathe without the aid of a ventilator. The medical authorities of Britainâs National Health Service, judging the case hopeless, recommend that the newborn be removed from life support, but Genevieve wonât hear of it, and the battle over the fate of Baby Broderick begins. Itâs waged in courtrooms andâcourtesy of a ceaselessly plugged-in, hypervigilant mediaâin the court of public opinion, which is decidedly on the side of the mother and father deciding if and when anyone pulls the plug. But what Danâs crusading wife doesnât knowâwhat heâs hiding from her and from everyoneâis that he agrees with the NHS doctors; he wants to see their son put out of his misery. To confess this, however, would be to risk losing, even infuriating, their legions of supporters (not to mention the money suddenly pouring in from crowdfunding sites for the childâs treatment). It might also reveal Danâs gnawing suspicion that his wife is acting as much out of maternal instinct as from a compulsive competitiveness: Sheâs driven to win, no matter the cost to their child and, indeed, to their marriage.
Based in part on a true story that divided Britain, this satiric and moving story asks who we can trust to care for the most fragile among us, particularly when a mother and father donât agree about the course of that care or, more fundamentally, agree about what life is, and how love is expressed and honored. What can any of us do when thoughtful discussion, any bid for compromise, is drowned out by a public whose reflex for outrage keeps our conflict-rich, headline-hungry, social-media-addled culture as robust as poor Baby Broderick is not and may never be?
March 31 2020
50 mins