Author:Julian Barnes

A special edition of Julian Barnes’s first novel with an introduction from the author and previously unseen archive material.
Christopher and Toni found in each other the perfect companion for that universal adolescent pastime: smirking at the world as you find it. In between training as flaneurs and the grind of school, they cast a cynical eye over their various dislikes: parents with their lives of spotless emptiness, Third Division (North) football teams, God, commuters and girls, and the inhabitants of Metroland: the strip of suburban dormitory Christopher calls home.
Longing for real life to begin, Christopher makes for Paris in time for les événements of 1968, only to miss it all in a haze of sex, French theatre and first love. And before long he finds himself drawn inevitably back to Metroland and the very life he was trying to escape...
This special edition contains unseen archive material including letters from early fans such as Philip Larkin and Dodie Smith, contemporary reviews, a deleted scene from the original manuscript as well as an introduction from the author.
I was captivated from the first page. I cannot remember when I enjoyed a first novel more
—— Nina Bawden , Daily TelegraphIf all works of fiction were as thoughtful, as subtle, as well constructed, and as funny as Metroland there would be no more talk of the death of the novel
—— New StatesmanA rare and unusual first novel
—— William Boyd , London MagazineA very funny, touching first novel. It has a hard comic edge to it that is logical and at the same time extremely diverting
—— SpectatorOne would have to look very hard to find a wryer, more lovingly detailed account of intellectual and sexual innocence abroad
—— Jay Parini , New York TimesAn alert, witty, unpredictable novel which brings a sharp fresh eye to bear on English character and English compromises
—— ObserverMetroland is a delicious book, sharp and witty and observant
—— The ListenerOne of the best accounts of clever English schoolboyhood I've read
—— Times Educational SupplementFlighty, playful… Barnes succeeds in vividly recreating teenage precociousness, particularly what it feels like to be a young male encountering love and sex
—— Los Angeles TimesA dazzling entertainer
—— New YorkerConsummately elegant
—— Sunday TimesHe writes perceptively about the shift from self-absorbed teenager to adult.
—— The TimesIf all works of fiction were as thoughtful, as subtle, as well constructed and as funny as Metroland there would be no more talk of the death of the novel
—— New StatesmanIt's one of the best accounts of clever English schoolboyhood I've read
—— Times Educational SupplementIrony and imagery are deployed with a finesse even Flaubert wouldn't wince at...consummately elegant
—— Sunday Times