Author:Richard Flanagan

FROM THE WINNER OF THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE 2014
Trapped within a waterfall on the wild Franklin River, Tasmanian river guide, Aljaz Cosini, lies drowning. As the tourists he has been guiding down the river seek to save him, Aljaz is beset by visions horrible and fabulous. As the rapids rise, Aljaz relives not just his own life but also his country’s dreaming.
Haunting
—— New York TimesStunning
—— Sunday TimesA torrent of a book – take the plunge
—— IndependentThis novel of spiritual desolation and redemption gathers such an awesome, tragic momentum that the fantastical aspects seem as crucial to the story as do the raging rivers, sheer gorges and imposing rainforests
—— Washington PostDeath of a River Guide is possessed of both a fierce, seething energy and a limpid, unexpected tranquillity
—— Irish TimesOne of the most auspicious debuts in Australian writing
—— Times Literary SupplementA vivid, voluptuous, exhilarating writer
—— Sunday TelegraphDeath of a River Guide defies superlatives. It is that rare commodity - a wonderful fiction which has pace, depth of feeling, and infinite imaginative possibilities
—— Scotland on SundayCombines a rich voice, highly original, with great invention and engrossing narrative pace...very, very good indeed
—— Thomas KeneallyButcher’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 , Guardian






