Author:Nevil Shute,John Boyne
Nevil Shute’s classic Second World War novel is an uplifting, satisfying and moving story.
John Howard is determined to brighten up his old age by taking a fishing trip to France. However, during his stay the Nazis invade and he is forced to try to escape back to England with the two small children of some friends who must stay behind to help the Allied war effort. As the conflict grows closer, the roads become impassable and Howard also comes across five more children who need his help. He ends up leading this motley group of youngsters through the French countryside, constantly beset by danger yet heroically protecting his charges.
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY JOHN BOYNE
'A very good writer...simple, elegant and readable...a fantastic story' Jonathan Coe
Mr Shute not only writes vividly and excitingly of occupied France, but with a delightful understanding of children
—— Sunday TimesA small masterpiece...a book about frail but indomitable old age, simple kindness, childhood, and courage in dark confusing danger. It is not sentimental but prosaic and suspenseful on every page...it conjures up the country of the 1940's, and gently acclaims the value of ordinary decency in wicked times
—— Libby PurvesA brilliantly descriptive writer, a master of suspense
—— David HollowayExhibits his talents at their provocative best
—— New York TimesThat shattering, unaffected, literary style of his is wholly deceptive...is, in fact, masterly
—— H.E. BatesRemarkable books...I share a fierce personal regard for Nevil Shute
—— Richard BachIn his portrayal of a young son's love for his lost father David Vann has created a stunning work of fiction: surprising, beautiful and intensely moving
—— Nadeem Aslam, author of Maps for Lost LoversOne of the most gripping debuts I've ever read
—— Philip Hoare, author of LeviathanImpossible to put down and equally impossible to forget
—— San Francisco ChronicleAn American classic ... harrowing but beautifully wrought ... prose as clear and bracing as a mountain stream
—— Sunday TimesOne jaw-droppingly powerful, courageous and original fiction debut...As a 10th work of fiction this would be impressive; as a debut, it is remarkable
—— Sunday TelegraphHands down the best fictional debut we have read this year
—— Dazed & ConfusedFor the imagery alone and for the sentences, the book would be a treasure, but the story it tells - the story of the suicide of the author's father - has an immediacy and sharpness made all the more special by the tone of distance in the narrative and the beauty of the writing
—— Colm Toibin, Observer books of the yearDavid Vann's Legend of a Suicide is brave, fantastically well written, and completely defies categorisation
—— Julie Myerson, Daily Telegraph books of the yearFrom the shores of Vann's Alaska one can see the Russia of Turgenev's Fathers and Sons ... 'A father, after all,' Vann writes, 'is a lot for a thing to be.' A son is also a lot for a thing to be; so is an artist. With Legend of a Suicide David Vann proves himself a fine example of both
—— New York Times...a gripping fantasy thriller that will please all the older Harry Potter fans out there
—— Yours MagazineJonathan Littell veers between brilliance and bathos...
—— Sally Cousins , The TelegraphGrotesque, dismaying, chilling in its focus on the fine detail of barbarism, this epic of evil is also addictively readable
—— Boyd Tonkin , Independent on SundayCompelling... utterly engaging... for anyone whose interest in his subjects is great to enough to bear their unflinching portrayal The Kindly Ones is an essential novel
—— Chris Power , The TimesIt's an amazing picture of evil, wonderfully written (and very well translated from the original French by Charlotte Mandell), and left me feeling as though I had supped with the damned
—— Jane Knight , The Times