Author:Philip Roth

Brought to you by Penguin.
The Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Philip Roth turns his gaze on 30s and 40s America in this magnificent successor to American Pastoral.
Ira Ringold is an American roughneck who transforms himself from a ditch-digger in 1930s New Jersey, to a radio hotshot in the 1940s. In his heyday as a star - and as a bullying supporter of 'progressive' political causes - Ira marries Hollywood's leading lady, Eve Frame. Their glamorous honeymoon is short-lived, however, and it is the publication of Eve's scandalous bestselling exposé that identifies Ira as 'an American taking his orders from Moscow'. In this story of cruelty, betrayal, and revenge friends become deadly enemies, parents and children estranged, lovers blacklisted and the great felled from vertiginous heights.
'Knotted with energy, barely wasting a scene or word in its cracking velocity' Mail on Sunday
'A passionate and coruscating American tragedy' Financial Times
© 1998 Philip Roth (P)2023 Penguin Audio
A passionate and coruscating American tragedy
—— Financial TimesKnotted with energy, barely wasting a scene or word in its cracking velocity
—— Mail on SundayOne of the great political novels of our age; a card-carrying Shakespearean tragedy with New Jersey dirt beneath its fingernails
—— Xan Brooks , GuardianQuintessential Philip Roth
—— Sunday TelegraphA magnificent novel of ideas, a disquisition on the fallout of the death of ideology
—— ObserverRoth explores our expedients and tragedies with a masterly, often unnerving, blend of tenderness, harshness, insight and wit...a gripping novel
—— New York Times Book ReviewRoth remains as edgy, as furious, as funny, and as dangerous as he was forty years ago
—— New York Review of BooksI Married a Communist proves that, following the success of Sabbath's Theater and American Pastoral, he remains on extraordinary form... Wonderful storytelling and characterisation
—— Guardian, Books of the YearThe McCarthy era has faded, eerily, into nostalgia, just as Capitol Hill produces its own 90s version of witch-hunt and communal obsession with enemies of the state, and perversions of justice perpetrated in democracy's name. Roth avoids nostalgia by making his narrator an active, if unwitting participant in the original drama, caught up in political currents and counter-currents he did not comprehend at the time
—— Lisa JardineRoth’s conflicted, many-layered characters give this work memorable force
—— GuardianThe debut novel from 2021 Merky Books New Writers' Prize winner Jyoti may be one of the best books you read this year. The Things That We Lost is an achingly tender and heartfelt exploration of family, loss, and the lengths to which we go to protect the ones we love... Jyoti Patel is an exciting new writer, deftly exploring deep family intricacies, love and grief in equal measure.
—— PlatinumAn invigorating narrative centred around family, loss and protection.
—— The HandbookThere is an immersive and intimate quality about Patel's writing - from its portrayal of London teenage slang to the detailed depiction of British-Gujarati culture. Her characters have a depth that brings a poignant reality to issues around coping with grief, abuse and racial prejudice, and navigating family and friendship dynamics. An enthralling read."
—— Breaking News.ieImmeasurably moving, a poignant and touching story about love and family bonds, and an especially tender portrait of a mother and son.
—— Huma QureshiA deeply reflective, searching depiction of grief.
—— Rabeea Saleem, The Times Literary SupplementThe Things That We Lost took me by the hand and guided me through my worst ever reading slump! Patel writes about the complexities of family life with such wisdom and heart.
—— Sairish HussainCaptivating and deeply moving.
—— Mohsin ZaidiFrank, funny and light on its feet, it's a novel about generations, hopes and grief. A writer with a deft turn of phrase.
—— Ali SmithA beautiful novel; it feels real and honest, with characters that seem to lift off the page and come alive…[it] is a book bursting with love
—— The ListThe queen of family secrets
—— BookPageWhat a treat. I don't know of anyone who writes about family with the same generous understanding
—— Gary ShteyngartGripping, unexpected and beautiful
—— Jamie Lee CurtisWears its philosophical intentions on its sleeve; well-developed characters and their interesting careers seal the deal.
—— KirkusThe wisdom and beauty in these seamlessly-braided narratives form a singular emotional experience for the reader that is both immediate and everlasting.
—— Simon Van BooyA beautiful exploration of the connections between two families and the reverberations from a teenager's lie...Shapiro imagines in luminous prose how each of the characters' lives might have gone if things had turned out differently...an intriguing meditation
—— Publishers WeeklyShapiro writes with compassion and a deep understanding of the damage that secrets wreak
—— Library JournalShapiro returns...with a beautiful exploration of the connections between two families and the reverberations from a teenager's lie... Shapiro imagines in luminous prose how each of the characters' lives might have gone if things had turned out differently. It's an intriguing meditation.
—— Publishers WeeklyShapiro delivers keen perceptions about family dynamics via fictional characters that exude a rare combination of substance and delicacy. Stunning in depth and breadth, this luminous examination of loss and acceptance, furtiveness and reliability, abandonment and friendship ultimately blazes with profound revelations
—— BooklistGorgeous
—— BookPageLyrical and sharp
—— iSignal Fires is an exquisite portrait of two families, and a testament to the human capacity to experience love and loss. With wry tenderness it shows how we are all connected through time in ways that are at once beautiful, mysterious, profound and full of hope.
—— Mummy PagesA book about desire and about love, about where these emotions meet and part and sometimes interlace in inescapable ways. But it is about so much more: these characters, for instance, painted by Warrell's uniquely masterful brush so that even in small moments they seem entirely whole, entirely alive...a classic in the making.
—— Brian Castleberry, author of Nine Shiny ObjectsJazz music is to be played sweet, soft, plenty rhythm,' proclaimed Jelly Roll Morton, and Warrell plays her exceptional first novel with plenty of rhythm and tenderness, delivered in brisk, mordantly gorgeous language that has its own natural flow.... A highly recommended story of love and life that makes beautiful music.
A capacious and sweeping telling in which writing about the past is a way of also staring dead on at the present.
—— Natasha Trethewey, author of NATIVE GUARDVictory City stands out as one of the year's literary highlights... that feels like an instant classic.
—— Bea Carvalho, Head of Fiction at WaterstonesRushdie is an assured storyteller at the height of his powers, revealing once again how important India is as a fount of his imagination.
—— ConversationVictory City is one of Rushdie's very best novels. It is also a luminous, italicised, vibrant reminder of the possibilities of free expression and of the untrammelled imagination. In this instance, the medium is indeed the message.
—— Tortoise MediaVictory City can, in many ways, be read as an entertaining jaunt through Indian history, though it is history through the kaleidoscopic and sweeping lens of a fairy tale... this brilliantly magical tale.
—— Irish IndependentThis sweeping, intricately crafted fairy tale is underscored by very human characters and Rushdie's signature wit.
—— Culture Whisper, *Books to Look Out For 2023*A grand entertainment, in a tale with many strands, by an ascended master of modern legends.
—— Kirkus ReviewRushdie's magical style unfurls wonders.
—— Washington PostRushdie's Victory City is another fabulous novel set in his native India... He's a master who never forgets that the main goal of a storyteller is to entertain rather than educate or pontificate.
—— New York Journal of BooksRushdie is, above all else...one of the most powerful defenders of story we have... Victory City is a victory for Rushdie - and for every reader who enters its gates.
—— Harper's BazaarRushdie succeeds in creating a kind of incantatory prose that befits the fabulist nature of the story... he can enchant readers like few other writers.
—— Literary ReviewThis is a man at his full-strength, high-tar best - with his deeply humane worldview, his brilliance at set-pieces and, above all, the thrilling wildness of his imagination on irresistible display.
—— Reader's DigestWith its carousel of shifting politics and history, Victory City is Rushdie's most textured and triumphant wonder tale yet.
—— HinduUtterly enchanting.
—— Eastern EyeRushdie's return to magic, myth, and India's ancient stories is dazzling. With mercurial prose and vivid renderings, Rushdie never loses us in Victory City's convolutions, but instead builds our trust to travail the many grand events of Pampa's imagined empire.
—— EsquireA rich, dramatic saga... The many moments of comedy...show Salman Rushdie's storytelling skills and his endearing sense of playfulness... the main feeling the reader gets is of a storyteller enjoying himself.
—— Tablet, *Novel of the Week*Rushdie is an expert at mixology; he's the DJ Shadow of text with references and allusions to high and low culture from Finnegans Wake to Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon... a well-told tale that gets bums on seats.
—— NationalThere's a magical thread of storytelling running through the veins of each character we meet in this book... a joy to read.
—— UK Press SyndicationA work of great imagination... In Victory City the power of the written word and of the storyteller remain triumphant.
—— NBRushdie’s sheer love of fiction is irrepressible.
—— Daily Telegraph, *Books of the Year*A wonderfully entertaining literary hybrid
—— The Times, *Books of the Year*Victory City is Salman Rushdie at his imaginative best… sweeping the reader on a journey that feels epic in a mere 320 pages
—— i, *Books of the Year*