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Don't Let Me Be Lonely
Don't Let Me Be Lonely
Jan 12, 2026 11:07 AM

Author:Claudia Rankine

Don't Let Me Be Lonely

The award-winning poet's powerful exploration of an America ever more unable to process its own toxins

Here, available for the first time in the UK, is the book in which Claudia Rankine first developed the 'American Lyric' form which makes her Forward Prize-winning collection Citizen so distinctive: an original combination of poetry, lyric essay, photography and visual art, virtuosically deployed. Don't Let Me Be Lonely is Rankine's meditation on the self bewildered by race riots, terrorism, medicated depression and television's ubiquitous influence. Written in the years after 9/11, this is an unflinching and deeply felt meditation on life and death in a nation in flux.

Reviews

Rankine brilliantly pushes poetry's forms ... one is left with a mix of emotions that linger and wend themselves into the subconscious

—— The New York Times

An unforgettable book ... mesmerizing ... terrifying

—— Jorie Graham

A master work in every sense

—— Robert Creeley

I don't know of a book of poems that so unabashedly, startlingly, successfully partakes of this contemporary combination of turbulence and torpor ... consuming

—— Pleiades

The world is such a mess. These poems concentrate on stillness, on time that isn’t haste. They deliver a zen remedy of calm alert.

—— Jeanette Winterson , Guardian

An uplifting read, full of warmth and wonderful characters; four-legged and human!

—— Daisy James , author of The Runaway Bridesmaid

Anyone dreaming of escaping to a rural life is going to love this. Pups, paw prints and piglets! A purr-fect curl-up read for country lovers!

—— Jane Linfoot , author of The Little Wedding Shop by the Sea

The Cauliflower brims with rich delicacies of arcana and ephemera ... [Barker] has created a zany, frustrating, brilliant work that, despite flaunting its historicity, does more to prove Barker's rich talent for invention.

—— Francesca Wade , Telegraph

A deeply researched piece whose fascinated impetuosity and esoteric mode of address still transmit a vast quantity of information about the guru and his life . . . watching Barker’s garrulous, profound, silly and bitingly intelligent mind at play is one of the greatest and most contagious delights in modern British fiction.

—— Tim Matin , New Statesman

It’s another terrific novel from Nicola Barker. As an experiment in structure and form it’s fascinating, but as an exploration of the life of someone we could never hope to understand, it’s absolutely essential.

—— Bookmunch

Comic and elaborate … A vivid panorama … The increasing pleasures to be found in The Cauliflower® arise not so much from espying the seams along which the novel’s texture is assembled as from the variously authoritative voices that tell this story from many competing perspectives.

—— Times Literary Supplement

A life story in all its mystical, magical human extremes . . . a mixture of irreverence and fascination, awe and appreciation, scepticism and wonderment, and it is so energetic that the pages fly . . . In The Cauliflower®, the most daring piece of storytelling to appear in English this year, faith is fact, imagination is knowledge.

—— S. Prasannajaran , Open Magazine (India)

The Cauliflower is an unconventional telling of a weird and wonderful story.

—— Culture Fly

Barker's writing is completely original and insightful and bursting full of spirituality. The novel is thoroughly enjoyable.

—— Press Association

[A] bold and fascinating work.

—— the skinny

A marvel of enlightened entertainment.

—— Sainsbury's Magazine

Bizarre but very readable; this novel is recommended.

—— The Book Bag

Barker’s writing is completely original and insightful.

—— Irish News

It worked beautifully for me.

—— A Life in Books

Impertinent, irreverent and very funny.

—— Tablet

A series of elegant meditations.

—— Claire Allfree , Metro

Moving and often genuinely tense—as well as richly informative.

—— James Walton , Readers' Digest

[It is] full of playful wit and understatement… A very short book but it contains more to enjoy and chew over than most novels three times its length.

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Sunday Express

But The Noise of Time shares with Leo Tolstoy’s The Kreutzer Sonata - another text which has at its centre the tyranny of music and its physiologically devastating potential – the capacity for evocation of music-making that is worthy of the real thing.

—— Catriona Kelly , Prospect

A brilliant portrait of an artist trying not to sign away his soul.

—— Caroline Moore , Spectator

At his thought-provoking best… A story about the collision of Art and Power, about human compromise, human cowardice and human courage. It is the work of a master.

—— Cath Turner , Nudge

[The Noise of Time is] disturbing, darkly comical and an ideal intellectual palate-cleanser to kick off the new year.

—— Saga Magazine

[A] densely written, masterfully told tale.

—— Esquire, Book of the Year

A new, short, highly concentrated novel…meditating in brief paragraphs on the art and compromise with power over 50 years in the life of the composer Shostakovich.

—— David Sexton , Evening Standard

Moving and often genuinely tense.

—— Reader's Digest

A brilliant reflection of one man’s consciousness, amid the fear and terror of authoritarian rule. Completely gripping and informative and entertaining, it is a classic Barnes concoction.

—— MumsNet

Pulsing with riffs on love, music and honesty both personal and artistic, it depicts a man who knows he’s a coward, even if his scores are courageous… Barnes also captures the farcical side of life in Soviet Russia.

—— Hephzibah Anderson , Mail on Sunday

A tour de force by a master novelist at the top of his game.

—— Huston Gilmore , Daily Express

Barnes’s prose is thoughtful and elegant.

—— Eoin McNamee , Irish Times

A great novel.

—— Bookmunch

Barnes pulls together all the strands of an artlessly diffuse and meticulously imagined portrait of life under tyranny. It is masterfully done.

—— UK Press Syndication

A distinctive and, as always with Barnes, highly readable marriage of suave execution and chilly, grown-up subject matter.

—— Keith Miller , Literary Review

With its three-act structure, dramatic tension, lyrical passages and recurring motifs, the novel has an operatic quality. Offering an intimate portrait of the artist and an overview of Russia’s troubled past, it’s a compelling read.

—— Juanita Coulson , The Lady

You’ll love this.

—— Anne Sexton , Hot Press

The Noise of Time is a brilliant impersonation, both as a novel and as a portrayal of the “real” historical Shostakovich.

—— Sheila Fitzpatrick , London Review of Books

A gripping story, a fascinating portrait of a period of history, and a brilliantly in-depth character study… Beautifully written… Philosophically and intellectually enriching.

—— Winq Magazine

A thoughtful, moving read about integrity, compromise and courage.

—— Good Housekeeping

Barnes has some striking setpieces in this probing, intellectually robust novel.

—— Ronan Farren , Irish Independent

The fear, danger and paranoia felt in those times rise memorably from the pages.

—— Choice Magazine

Barnes stands out, so vivid are his images and so poignant his insights. His works stand among the classics of the postmodern era, and for good reason.

—— Ben Craik , Upcoming

A marvellous meditation on the Cold War era and particularly the battles of conscience that besiege a man living under tyranny.

—— Richard Fitzpatrick , Irish Examiner

The tone is intimate and aphoristic, the paragraphs succinct.

—— David Gutman , Gramophone

A fascinating account of the life of Dimitri Shostakovich… Perceptive, symbolic… The Noise of Time is an essential read, and not only for musicians.

—— Classical Music

A finely-tuned masterpiece... Barnes' prose is supreme.

—— Western Morning News

An intimate portrait of a public intellectual living in a totalitarian atmosphere… Immersive… The Noise of Time presents a compelling story in engaging and original prose.

—— Conor O'Donovan , Headstuff

Kaleidoscopic portrait… Barnes deftly constructs a life history... A masterfully told story of survival. *****

—— Nick Shave , BBC Music Magazine

Beautifully composed.

—— Jenny Comita , W Magazine

Without a doubt, Barnes has succeeded the high expectations of the people who waited with bated breath for the release of The Noise of Time. In a work that feels both original and authentic, he encourages us to consider the importance of art, in whatever form, and the influence it can have on us all.

—— Beth Blakemore , Student Newspaper

Barnes at his best...a poignant fictional recreation of the artistic agonies of the composer Shostakovich.

—— Sunday Times

A very sensitive account of how art can be in conflict with naked political power.

—— Observer

A book I’d like to tuck myself away for a day to read. It’s short in length but by all accounts big on ideas and power.

—— Susie Dent , Radio Times Christmas Gift Guide

His Dmitri Shostakovich is completely believable.

—— Margaret MacMillan , New Statesman, Book of the Year

[A] brilliant study of the relationship between art and an oppressive regime… A compelling depiction of the country’s history and a richly imagined close-up of the artist.

—— Lady, Book of the Year

A poignant and thoughtful portrait of the persecuted artist.

—— Brad Davies , i, Book of the Year

[It is] elegant.

—— Duncan White , Daily Telegraph, Book of the Year

Another Brilliant reinvention by Barnes.

—— Daily Telegraph, Book of the Year #26

My favourite book of this year is The Noise of Time.

—— Margaret MacMillan , New Statesman, Book of the Year

His best for ages. It is gripping, outward-looking, generous with plot and atmosphere and far beyond the powers of McEwan, Amis, Ishiguro, Rushidie et al…. This book grabbed me by the nuts like nothing of his since Starting at the Sun.

—— Giles Coren , The Times, Book of the Year

[A] haunting novel on the agonies of Shostakovitch under Stalin and his successors… I recommended it to a friend who for years was one of the great reviewers at the Washington Post. His reply: “It’s an extraordinary book. It’s a book that makes me wish I were reviewing again.”

—— Alex Russell , Financial Times, Book of the Year

A mini-masterpiece.

—— Rebecca Rose , Financial Times, Book of the Year

An elegant portrait of Shostakovitch.

—— Ali Smith , Guardian, Book of the Year

Written with Barnes’ characteristic low-key elegance, the book becomes a meditation on artistic integrity and its limits in a brutal regime

—— Irish Independent, Book of the Year

An impressive narrative of personal integrity.

—— G. Van Der Zwaan , Times Higher Education, Book of the Year

As a portrait of the composer and his time this book is a complete success… The Noise of Time is also convincing in the details… A book in which a certain grim humour is never too far away.

—— Nicholas Lezard , Guardian

[A] gem of a novel.

—— Mail on Sunday

A compelling read that combines sharp insights, lyrical passages and dramatic tension.

—— Lady

Black humour and retrospective anguish prevail in Julian Barnes’s latest novel.

—— Lara Enoch , Guardian

A beautifully told story, this is subtle and powerful.

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

This small novel is an elegant and unflinching account of a life lived under extreme pressure, during Stalin’s Great Terror. Julian Barnes fleshes out the life of the composer Shostakovich whose life is under threat. A powerful story, well-crafted and beautifully written about the humanity and torments of a creative soul… An informative, thought provoking read.

—— Western Morning News

An immense emotional and intellectual punch.

—— Sunday Times
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