Dimensions
136 x 204 x 18mm
This spellbinding story introduces the unforgettable seventeen-year-old narrator, Luke Prescott, who has been brought up in a bohemian matriarchy by his divorced New Age mother, a religious grandmother, and two precocious half-sisters. Having spent a short lifetime swinging agreeably between the poles of Eastern mysticism and New England Puritanism, Luke is fascinated by the new fields of brain science and believes in having evidence for his beliefs. andldquo;Without evidence,andrdquo; he declares, andldquo;you just have hope, which is nice, but not reliable.andrdquo; Luke is writing his college applications when his fatherandmdash;a famous television star whom he never knewandmdash;calls and invites him to Los Angeles for the summer. Luke accepts and is plunged into a world of location shooting, celebrity interviews, glamorous parties, and premieres. As he begins to know the difference between his fatherandrsquo;s public persona and his private one, Luke finds himself sorting through his own personal mythology. and#160;and#160;and#160;and#160; By the end of the summer Luke thinks he has found the answers heandrsquo;s been seeking, only to discover that the differences between truth and belief are not always easy to spot, and that evidence can be withheld: when Luke returns home, his mother reveals something she knows will change everything for him. and#160;and#160;and#160;and#160; With Blind Sight, Meg Howrey gives us a smart, funny, and deeply moving story about truth versus belief, about what we do and donandrsquo;t tell ourselvesandmdash;with the result, as Luke says, that we donandrsquo;t always know what we know.From the Hardcover edition.