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A Meeting by the River
A Meeting by the River
Mar 21, 2026 6:14 AM

Author:Christopher Isherwood

A Meeting by the River

Breaking a long silence Oliver, a young Englishman, writes to his elder brother, Patrick. Oliver, the idealistic younger brother is living in a Hindu Monastery and has decided to take his final monastic vows. Patrick, a successful, long-married publisher, newly in love with a boy in Los Angeles, decides to visit Oliver to persuade him not renounce the world.

First published in 1967, A Meeting by the River exposes the complex rivalries of sibling relationships and dramatises the conflict between sexuality and spirituality.

Reviews

The classical opposition between the good brother and the bad one convinces… you believe in them

—— Guardian

A radiant novel of mystical devotion and worldly desire by a master of English prose

—— Chicago Tribune

Brilliant, vital, challenging . . . very strange and very lovely

—— Book Week

The perfect modern-day whodunit. A cracking read full of hilarious insights into the Big Brother phenomenon

—— Mirror

One of the best whodunits I have ever read...a funny, gripping, hugely entertaining thriller, but also a persuasive, dyspeptic account of the way we live now, with our insane, inane cult of the celebrity

—— Sunday Telegraph

Quite brilliant in every sense of the word

—— David Evans , Independent on Sunday

A very funny book about a sensitive subject ... Ben Elton the writer might even be funniter than Ben Elton the comic

—— Daily Mail

Something rarer than a great novel -- it is a perfect novel, so well told and beautifully written, so deeply moving, that it takes your breath away...few stories this sad could be so secretly triumphant, or so exhilarating.

—— New York Times

A beautiful and moving novel, as sweeping, intimate and mysterious as life itself

—— Geoff Dyer

The most extraordinary work of fiction I've read in a long time... If you're looking for a book that's simple and subtle, warmly human and at the same time utterly pitiless in his rendition of the vicissitudes of an ordinary existence, here's one you will read again and again

—— New Statesman

Unquestionably one of the finest novels of the 20th century, its genius lies in its candour and in prose that simmers with subtle intent.

—— Irish Times

The word-of-mouth hit of the summer. Read it and you’ll see why

—— Daily Telegraph

It’s as if this novel is about all of us: our hopes, disappointments and sorrows… a lesson in values, told with love and awe

—— Bel Mooney , Daily Mail

A wonderful novel, rich and sombre, a record of pain and less but also of moments of vision and tenderness... flawless

—— Adam Foulds , Independent

This short-but-striking novel quickly reveals itself to be…crime fiction, yes, but also a subtle and deeply introspective consideration of the inertia of lonely middle-age, its philosophy existentialist in the manner of Jean Paul Sartre, Ingmar Bergman and certain novels of Georges Simenon. The result is a highly complex and accomplished work

—— Billy O'Callaghan , Irish Examiner

Intriguing tale… Solstad expertly navigates the bizarre mind of a clever but lonely man locked in an existentialist nightmare

—— Telegraph

This is no straightforward crime novel…an exploration of guilt, inaction and moral quandaries

—— Nic Bottomley , Bath Life
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