Author:John Steinbeck

This lush, lyrical fantasy is Steinbeck's sole work of historical fiction. Henry Morgan ruled the Spanish Main in the 1670s, ravaging the coasts of Cuba and America and striking terror wherever he went. His lust and greed knew no bounds, and he was utterly consumed by two passions; to possess the mysterious woman known as La Santa Roja, the Red Saint, and to conquer Panama and wrest 'the cup of gold' from Spanish hands.
A marvellous novel
—— Jonathan Coe , GuardianThe most significant novel yet about Korea. For the first time, a Korean author has fused both classical and contemporary indigenous poetry with the skill and breadth of vision expected of an international writer
—— Keith Howard , Times Literary SupplementThis book goes to the heart of the artist's greatest concern: the freedom to create, the courage to create in a climate of uncertainty and repression
—— Alfred Eibel , Quotidien de Paris'A very gripping story . . . the reader is drawn in inexorably to discover what horror lies at the heart of it . . . an apocalyptic fable for today'
—— John Spurling , The Times Literary Supplement'Many respectable judges would put Edric in the top ten of British novelists currently at work . . . as a writer, he specialises in the delicate hint and the game not given away'
—— D.J. Taylor , Spectator'It will be surprising if this year sees a more disturbing or haunting novel'
—— Peter Kemp , The Sunday Times'Stunning . . . evocatively brings to life the stifling humidity and constant rainfall of the Congo'
—— John Cooper , The Times'A really brilliant first novel, he is obviously a major talent'
—— Prunella Scales'The match of the madder moments of John Irving or Tom Sharpe...this is a promisingly entertaining "lite" read'
—— The Times'At its best when taking pot-shots at a wide variety of modern ills - fast food, tabloid media, downsizing, soap-opera politics...One of Morgan's nicer inventions is a computer program that boils down complex texts to their essentials. Its treatment of the Old Testament renders it down to: "Because I say so, that's why"'
—— Independent'Suspenseful, atmospheric and highly intelligent, Jody Shields focuses a brilliant light on the murky world of imperial Vienna'
—— D. M. Thomas






