Author:John Williams,Anthony Heald

Brought to you by Penguin.
BY THE AUTHOR OF STONER
Will Andrews is no academic. He longs for wildness, freedom, hope and vigour. He leaves Harvard and sets out for the West to discover a new way of living.
In a small town called Butcher's Crossing he meets a hunter with a story of a lost herd of buffalo in a remote Colorado valley, just waiting to be taken by a team of men brave and crazy enough to find them. Will makes up his mind to be one of those men, but the journey, the killing, harsh conditions and sheer hard luck will test his mind and body to their limits.
©2023 John Williams (P)2023 Penguin Audio
His Stoner is the book that has garnered the attention, but I prefer this earlier take on the Western genre…it has some gory, visceral passages that are not for the faint-hearted
—— Kate Atkinson , Irish TimesShorn of sentimentality or decoration, the events and places [Williams] describes begin to feel inescapable, permanent, and rivetingly dramatic. This is language that seems to be carved into stone – into mountains... Stoner showed us a writer who had written a great book. To those of us who didn't know already, Butcher's Crossing reveals John Williams to be more than that: forgotten writer as he was, he was unquestionably also a great one
—— Archie Bland , IndependentSuperbly understated
—— Rosemary Goring , HeraldOne of the finest books about the elusive nature of the West ever written… It’s a graceful and brutal story of isolated men gone haywire
—— Time OutHarsh and relentless yet muted in tone, Butcher’s Crossing paved the way for Cormac McCarthy
—— New York Times Book ReviewButcher's Crossing is like a western by Joseph Conrad...wonderful...beautifully written
—— David NichollsThis story about the hunt of one of the last great buffalo herds becomes a young man’s search for the integrity of his own being…The characters are defined, the events lively, the place, the smells, the sounds right. And the prose is superb
—— Chicago TribuneIt is the novel's immense visual power and tangibility of material detail, its fully realized sense of time and place, its telling incidents, its nimble and subtle resonance with the Bible, and its fleshed-out characters, that make it a very great work
—— Boston GlobeJohn Williams's unsparing novels express a highly qualified though resilient optimism about our ability to salvage something of value from life's impossible conditions. Along with the necessary isolation of the artist, he conveys the sobering if startled recognition--perhaps with his own career in mind--of the transitory triumph of art
—— Times Literary SupplementButcher’s Crossing is remarkable for the accuracy of Williams’s prose
—— John Sutherland , The TimesIntense, unflinching lucidity
—— Peter Kemp , Sunday Times[Williams] has produced something timeless and great’ ‘Butcher’s Crossing, written in 1960 and Williams’s first mature novel, is far removed from the time and place of Stoner. It may also be the better novel
—— Nicholas Lezard , GuardianHad me on the edge of my seat... If you do not read another book all year, read this one. At the end, I was quite gasping for breath
—— Virginia Blackburn , Sunday ExpressIt is a novel of great beauty and power, and it deserves the same belated recognition accorded Stoner
—— David Evans , Independent on SundayFrom the author of Stoner, a western full of the same psychological intensity
—— The Timessupremely well-written and built to last
—— Adam Foulds , SpectatorReaders of Stoner will hopefully come to Butcher’s Crossing to get more of what Williams can provide: thoughtfulness, strong writing, powerful characterisation, involving drama and images and details that remain in the reader’s mind long after reading
—— BookmunchThe evocation of landscape is unforgettable
—— Boyd Tonkin , IndependentWilliams's intense semi-skimmed prose – so different from [Herman] Melville's full-fat variety – has the same power to mesmerize... Likely to become a favourite of 2014
—— Times Literary SupplementThe tale of men struggling to survive in a brutal landscape is told in language so sparse that whole passages are made up of monosyllabic vocabulary that is powerfully immersive. You can only guess at the influence Williams may have had on Cormac McCarthy
—— Ben Felsenburg , MetroWilliams is a versatile writer: the story of Will Andrews couldn't be more different to the tale of William Stoner – and his depiction of the behaviour of men in extreme situations is masterful
—— OldieA meditative cowboy yarn with a putative ecological message, it could not be more different from Williams’s [Stoner]; it is just as good
—— David Evans, 5 stars , Independent On SundayIt is a sort of Dances with Buffaloes, and one of the most tense, gripping, tragic novels I have ever read
—— Giles Coren , The TimesStoner...is a fine book but his western novel Butcher's Crossing is even better... Visceral, violent and chilling.
—— Barbara Taylor Bradford , Daily MirrorA novel that turns upside down the expectations of the genre—and goes to war with a century of American triumphalism, a century of regeneration through violence, a century of senseless slaughter.
—— John Plotz , GuardianA feel-good read, with great characters to care about, it takes current issues seriously but adds plenty of humour
—— Choice[It leaves] the reader with that fuzzy feeling you want from a feel-good book. Fans of her previous hit, The Authenticity Project, will not be disappointed
—— Woman's WeeklyA feel-good tale about the power of real-life connections
—— SunYou can always rely on Pooley to deliver not just wonderful, lively characters but a story that leaves you feeling uplifted and hopeful
—— CultureFlyA beautiful and devastating debut novel about political memory, violence, masculinity, and the impossibility of escaping your origins.
—— JacobinA sharp and humane novel about a young man, and a city, caught in the painful throes of reimagining themselves. It rings with authenticity, and the wisdom of hard-won observation and experience - a hymn to the ways in which art can be a lifeline and an escape. Michael Magee's debut is an important addition to the burgeoning new canon of Belfast literature
—— Lucy Caldwell, author of 'These Days'Compulsively readable - you will need to know how this ends!
—— Emilie Pine, author of 'Notes to Self'Sharp, immediate, beautiful writing. A vivid portrait of modern Belfast and of how our circumstances shape our lives. Every character is drawn with nuance and complexity, with great precision and attention to detail. I really loved this book
—— Rachel Connolly, author of 'Lazy City'Artfully crafted, compassionate, precise and unafraid. I loved this book
—— Susannah Dickey, author of 'Common Decency'Close to Home tracks brilliantly written characters across a vividly drawn Belfast
—— Business PostOne of the year’s most distinctive and immersive debuts . . . Drawing on his own experiences, Michael Magee refreshes the post-Troubles novel to wrestle with his community’s painful heritage of violence and poverty. It sounds bleak, but Sean’s voice fizzes with life
—— The Times, 'Best Novels of 2023'It's hard to find fault with a debut novel that unfold its storylines and characters with such care, handling themes of class, masculinity, addiction and trauma with both tenderness and a matter-of-factness
—— RTÉ, Book of the WeekMichael Magees Close to Home is yet another brilliant novel to emerge from Northern Ireland, making sense of the impact of the long conflict and the transition to troubled peace; Magee powerfully delineates the psychology of those crushed by betrayal
—— Irish Times, 'Best Books of 2023'An emotionally satisfying book with wise and moving moments
—— Good HousekeepingA humorous take on Hollywood romcoms
—— BBC BEST BOOKS OF THE YEARSexy, funny, thought-provoking and everything I hoped it would be. Her best novel since American Wife.
—— RED, Best Books of the YearRomantic Comedy combines humour with poignancy and a lot of heart.
—— GOOD HOUSEKEEPING, Best romance books to readSittenfeld's novel continues her wider project of exploring the possibility for a kind of redemptive idealism within our flawed world
—— GUARDIANSittenfeld has penned another exquisitely written novel
—— WOMAN MAGAZINEA fizzy love letter to the prototypical romcom
—— NEW YORK TIMES, Editor's ChoiceSo much of Sittenfeld's work exists in the dissection and comprehension of female desire
—— NEW YORK TIMESFlirting with the tropes of its namesake genre, this playful novel follows Sally, a writer on an "S.N.L."-like show called "Night Owls," who falls in love with one of its guest hosts. Their relationship develops via e-mail in the post-grocery-wiping, pre-vaccine days of covid-19. When Sally decides to visit her beloved in L.A., their time together in his Topanga mansion requires her to navigate incredulity, insecurity, and an offer that she feels is an "affront to my independence." The novel is preoccupied with the instinctual nature of self-sabotage, and with the fulfillment that can come from defying ingrained impulses
—— NEW YORKERInsightful romcom sparkles with real wit and wisdom
—— SUNDAY INDEPENDENTWhip smart and really funny
—— BUSINESS POSTScores big on giving readers an insight into the machinations of a TV writers-room
—— CRACKFull of dazzling banter and sizzling chemistry
—— PEOPLE MAGAZINEIf you ever wanted a backstage pass to Saturday Night Live, this book is for you
—— GOOD MORNING AMERICAExcellent
—— MAIL ON SUNDAYBoth a brilliant portrait of the comedy world and a witty grown-up love story. Lives up to its name
—— IRISH TIMES






