A savagely beautiful novel about the many forms of love and death, of war and truth, as one man comes of age, prospers, only to discover all that he has lost
Richard Flanagan was born in Tasmania in 1961. His novels Death of a River Guide, The Sound of One Hand Clapping, Gould’s Book of Fish, The Unknown Terrorist, Wanting and The Narrow Road to the Deep North have received numerous honours and are published in 42 countries. He won the Man Booker Prize for The Narrow Road to the Deep North in 2014.
Some years, very good books win the Man Booker Prize but this year
a masterpiece has won it
*A.C. Grayling, Chair of Judges, Man Booker Prize 2014*
A novel of extraordinary power, deftly told and hugely affecting. A
classic in the making... Masterful
*Observer*
Devastatingly beautiful
*Sunday Times*
Utterly convincing... A grand examination of what it is to be a
good man and a bad man in the one flesh, and, above all, of how it
is to live after survival... To say Flanagan creates a rich
tapestry is to overly praise tapestries
*Guardian*
Elegantly wrought, measured and without an ounce of melodrama,
Flanagan's novel is nothing short of a masterpiece
*Financial Times*
Considered by many to be the finest Australian novelist of his
generation... A journey of loss and discovery, this is a novel
replete with scenes that stay with the reader long after the final
page… Never sentimental or overwritten, Flanagan explores human
reactions, large and small... The book Mr Flanagan was born to
write
*The Economist*
An absolutely almighty book and unfailingly beautifully written
*Neel Mukherjee*
An unforgettable story of men at war... Flanagan's prose is richly
innovative and captures perfectly the Australian demotic... He
evokes Evans' affair with Amy, and his subsequent soulless
wanderings, with an intensity and beauty that is as poetic as the
classical Japanese literature that peppers this novel
*The Times*
Flanagan’s novel [has] grace and unfathomability… Flanagan’s
writing courses like a river, sometimes black with mud, sludge and
corpses, sometimes bright with moonlight… The stories of these
casualties of fate catch at the soul
*Sunday Telegraph*
Powerful, often brutal love story… His feel for language, history’s
persistent undercurrent and subtle detail sets his fiction apart.
There isn’t a false note in this book. He can evoke emotion without
a trace of sentimentality or bathos... One of the finest novels
published in English this year
*Irish Times*
His quiet, unrelenting style is often unbearably powerful… A
classic work of war fiction from a world-class writer
*Washington Post*
Flanagan is an outstanding writer. A beauty clings to the
underneath of his sentences, even when he is describing hell on
earth
*Metro*
Nothing could have prepared us for this immense achievement... The
Narrow Road to the Deep North is beyond comparison... Intensely
moving
*The Australian*
I would be very happy if this won the Booker
*BBC Radio 4 Saturday Review*
A masterly novel… A tour de force… the love story was beautiful
*BBC Radio 4 Saturday Review*
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