Skip to content
Bereavements poster

Bereavements

"Mother Who Lost Son Seeks Son Who Has Lost Mother," read the advertisement in The Village Voice.Those who replied the curious, the disturbed, the opportunistic were writing to Mrs. Harrington-Smith Evans, one of the ten wealthiest women in the world whose only child, a teenage boy, had died a mysterious death.Pretentious, theatrical, wantonly self-dramatized, increasingly deranged in her grief, Mrs. Evans indulges in all the extravagant expressions of bereavement that money can buy: a seamless glass coffin; an embalming secret the pharaohs of ancient Egypt must have dreamed of; and a tomb so costly and exquisite, Shan Jahan's ghost surely groaned in its envy.Finally, the ad: in retrospect so silly and embarrassing she needn't kill herself to die. But if she found him, a surrogate son might ease her grief, forestall her encroaching madness.From the many respondents, her choice narrows down to three: Angel, an illiterate boy from New York's Spanish ghetto; Martin, a handsome, fatally ambitious young actor; and disarming Bruno, barely eighteen, an aspiring novelist who writes her perfumed letters in an absurd 19th century prose.The Rivalries, the passions, the bizarre events that follow this strange entourage include murder, suicide, and a "haunting" like no other in this world or the next.

Find it on

Amazon

Reviews

No videos available yet.

News

No news articles linked to this title yet.

No tags available.

Bottom star pattern decoration

Bereavements Ratings

Overall

Overall rating of the media

0.0 0 ratings

Atmosphere

How immersive and tense is the atmosphere

0.0 0 ratings

Gore

Level and quality of gore/violence

0.0 0 ratings

Story

Quality of the storyline and plot

0.0 0 ratings

Writing

Quality of the written content

0.0 0 ratings

Character Development

Depth and growth of characters

0.0 0 ratings

Pacing

Flow and timing of the narrative

0.0 0 ratings