![]() ![]() And whereas Jack had the misfortune (or was it the benefit?) of being told by a computer program that he was likely to die prematurely, Ross, who is in his 60s and in generally good health, is faced with an indefinite number of years alone.īut the man is a doer, a change agent, a global financier of master-of-the-universe proportions (he has appeared on the cover of Newsweek in a pin-striped suit). One is dying and the other, who doesn’t want to lead the life he’d be leading without his wife, is not. Artis, his elegant, formidable, and younger second wife, is an archeologist in the end stages of multiple sclerosis. Ross is a billionaire businessman of the art-collecting, island-retreat-owning, private-jet-traveling variety. Ross Lockhart and Artis Martineau, the couple not quite at the center but certainly at the existential heart of DeLillo’s latest novel, Zero K, are experiencing a nonhypothetical version of Jack and Babette’s imagined dilemma. Who decides these things? What is out there? Who are you? ![]() But I don’t want to be alone either … Let us both live forever, in sickness and health, feebleminded, doddering, toothless, liver spotted, dim-sighted, hallucinating. Given a choice between loneliness and death, it would take me a fraction of a second to decide. ![]()
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