Author:Gabriele D'Annunzio,Lara Gochin Raffaelli,Alexander Stille

The great Italian masterpiece of sensuality and seduction, published in a new English translation - the first since the Victorian era - that puts the sex back in Pleasure.
Like Oscar Wilde's Dorian Gray, Andrea Sperelli lives his life as a work of art, seeking beauty and flouting the rules of morality and social interaction along the way. In his aristocratic circles in Rome, he is a serial seducer. But there are two women who command his special regard: the beautiful young widow Elena, and the pure, virgin-like Maria. In Andrea's pursuit of the exalted heights of extreme pleasure, he plays them against each other, spinning a sadistic web of lust and deceit.
Gabriele D'Annunzio was born in Italy in 1863. He published poetry and short stories from a young age, quickly gaining a reputation for his frank treatment of erotic subjects. He married in 1883 and had three children, but separated from his wife and began an infamous affair with the actress Elonora Duse. After stints as a journalist and politician, he enlisted as a fighter pilot in World War I, subsequently losing an eye in a flying accident. He became increasingly nationalistic and politically active after the war, and his views had a strong influence on Mussolini. In 1922 he survived a murder attempt, when an unknown assailant defenestrated him. He died in 1938.
Lara Gochin Raffaelli is a senior lecturer at the University of Cape Town in South Africa.
Alexander Stille is a frequent contributor on Italy to The New York Review of Books, The New York Times, and The New Yorker and the author of several books, including The Sack of Rome. He lives in New York.
One of the most eloquent and imaginative works to deal with this difficult and emotive subject
—— Martin Seymour-SmithIt recalled to me very vividly the occasions I have walked 'the wrong way' in an Indian city, and it is a way down which no novelist has yet taken me
—— E. M. ForsterThis is a finely honed work of sophisticated gaming that flirts with truth; yet it never forgets that it's also a plot-driven fiction
—— Philip Womack , Daily TelegraphIf writing about creative writing is to risk a novel eating itself, we can be thankful that a writer of Royle’s skills put himself in charge of the banquet
—— Gerard Woodward , GuardianAn intricate story with an unsettlingly noirish effect
—— Lucy Scholes , ObserverDead clever and occasionally macabre… Intricately plotted, proper wince-inducing stuff… A cutting-edge, vital new British novel for now
—— Stuart Hammond , Dazed & ConfusedHighly recommended… First Novel is a clever book, but as well as having brains it has guts: it begins slowly but soon acquires the characteristics of a thriller, and the ending is a revelation
—— Simon Baker , SpectatorOnly a man with prodigious talent, not to mention a capacity for multi-tasking, would even attempt a book of such monumental ambition… Far too good to be a debut. Which, of course, it isn’t.This is a novel that demands to be read more than once.
—— Gavin James Bower , IndependentI began by simply enjoying the novel and ended up being thrilled, horrified, disturbed. First Novel is absolutely at the forefront of everything I’ve read in British fiction over the last couple of years.
—— Jonathan CoeA crafty puzzler that folds the Shipman murders into the tale of a no-mark writing tutor with a fetish for car sex under the Manchester flight path.
—— Anthony Cummins , Evening StandardBlurs fact and fiction with aplomb… Royle’s novel is a sharp portrait of a man going very wrong.
—— Ben Felsenburg , MetroExtremely good.
—— John Burnside , The TimesDazzling… Royle attended last year’s Man Booker Prize ceremony as editor of one of the shortlisted titles, Alison Moore’s The Lighthouse… I wouldn’t bet against Royle having to dry-clean the tux on his own account next time.
—— Anthony Cummins , Sunday TelegraphRoyle’s coup is to deliver the pithy sting of a good short story many times over the course of a whole novel.
—— Claire Lowdon , New StatesmenI admired it so much and wanted to go back and see how it was all put together. His book absolutely enchanted me.
—— Jenn Ashworth , IndependentThis may be a tricksily metafictional novel but Royle hasn’t forgotten his readers.
—— Stephanie Cross , Daily Mail5 stars, gripping, innovative and fluent.
—— BookmebookblogNicholas Royle has produced the holy grail: a literary page-turner. Although it’s published in January, I’ll be astonished if it doesn’t make the short list of many a prize at the end of the year.
—— BookmunchA strange, unsettling brew that simply entertains at first before revealing darker and more dangerous depths as it progresses; a dark and delicious treat for lovers of literary fiction who like to have their grey cells tickled.
—— JustwilliamsluckA vertiginous murder mystery with echoes of JG Ballard, David Lodge and Alain Robbe-Grillet
—— Sunday TelegraphIf writing about creative writing is to risk a novel eating itself, we can be thankful that a writer of Royle's skills put himself in charge of the banquet
—— Gerard Woodward , GuardianA brilliant, eerie mix of campus meta-novel, whodunnit, failed-love story and existential contemplation
—— Peter J. Smith , Times Higher EducationThis just might be the exceptional book which should be judged by its cover
—— Liam Heylin , Irish ExaminerAn ingenious tale
—— ObserverCleverly metafictional, humorously perverse, and impressively original
—— Courtney Garner , YorkerFunny, charming and heart-warming
—— Good Housekeeping UKIn this extremely bold, swashbuckling novel, romantic and disillusioned at once, intellectually daring and even subversive, Rachel Kushner has created the most beguiling American ingénue abroad, well, maybe ever: Daisy Miller as a sharply observant yet vulnerable Reno-raised motorcycle racer and aspiring artist, set loose in gritty 70s New York and the Italy of the Red Brigades
—— Francisco Goldman, author of Say Her NameRiveting
—— TimeRachel Kushner's The Flamethrowers is remarkable for its expansiveness and for its exhilarating succession of ideas
—— Mark West , The ListNational Book Award finalist Rachel Kushner brings NYC's art scene to life so well in The Flamethrowers you could get high off the paint
—— Entertainment WeeklyFast-paced, sexy and smart
—— CosmopolitanElectric...addictive...smart and satisfying
—— Oprah MagazineCaptivating and compelling
—— The BookbagThis is a work of ferocious energy and imaginative verve, straining at the seams with ideas, riffs, jokes, set-pieces, belly-laughs, horror and heartbreak
—— BooktrustKushner writes with authority, passion and humour, her characters richly drawn and her story packed with delicious anecdotes and side lines from a wide array of memorable characters
—— Tracy Eynon , We Love This BookSexy and brilliant
—— Sunday Times StyleIncandescent
—— ImageKushner's second novel comes loaded with recommendations and it's easy to see why…highly unusual and written with great seriousness and potency
—— GuardianIt manages to relate the art scene in 1970s New York to the Red Brigades in Italy, with lots of motorbikes thrown in
—— Nick Barley , HeraldKushner’s writing is a kind of marvel
—— Richard Fitzpatrick , Irish ExaminerThis novel has undeniable force and power… it’s beautifully written
—— Tim Martin , TelegraphYou can feel the wind whipping through your hair, your pulse racing, as Kushner’s daring heroine, Reno, motorcycles across salt flats and down city streets, on the prowl for art, for love, for a cause
—— The Oprah MagazineKushner’s take on 1970s radicalism, art and politics is a big, absorbing read
—— Financial TimesA self-consciously cool mash-up of motorbikes, art and unpleasant Italian politics
—— Nick Curtis , Evening StandardIn fiction I enjoyed Rachel Kushner's The Flamethrowers for its style and its daring
—— Colm Toibin , ObserverThe Flamethrowers by Rachel Kushner manages to connect the art scene in New York in the 1970s with the Red Brigades in Italy, through the medium of motorcycles and drag car racing. Ambitious and beautifully written, it is one of the more surprising books I have read this year
—— Gordon Brewer , ScotsmanIntroducing a fresh new voice
—— Justine Jordan , Guardian OnlineA left-field and potentially ludicrous literary concept – a multigenerational transcontinental historical epic built around a speed-freak biker heroine – is executed with élan by American novelist Rachel Kushner … Genius
—— Kevin Maher , The TimesThe novel, Kushner’s second, deploys mordant observations and chiseled sentences to explore how individuals are swept along by implacable social forces
—— New York TimesA Bildungsroman set against the violence of the 20th century, The Flamethrowers is less a litmus test for misogyny than a standard for the recent historical novel
—— Hannah Rosefield , Literary ReviewIt should've won the National Book Award... It is second to none
—— New York MagazineSome of the prose is as thrilling as riding a motorbike on a mountain road with no lights
—— Nicky Dunne , Evening StandardHas the kind of poise, wariness and moral graininess that puts you in mind of weary-souled visionaries like Robert Stone or Joan Didion
—— Dwight Garner , New York TimesFor a while last spring it seemed like every single person I knew in New York was reading The Flamethrowers, which is normally enough to put me off a book, but in this case I did read it and found that its ubiquity was more than justified. Then in September I happened to visit the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, where one of its most memorable set-pieces takes place, and I wanted to read it all over again. If I say it captures a young woman's experience of the downtown art world in the 1970s, I'm going to make it sound boring, but in fact it's superbly enjoyable
—— Ned Beauman , EsquireMuch of what makes this book so magnificent is Kushner's astonishing observational powers; she seems to work with a muse and a nail gun, so surprisingly yet forcefully do her sentences pin reality to the page. I was pinned there too –– BEST BOOK OF 2013
—— Kathryn Schulz , New York MagazineA terrific, gripping, poetic book... Kushner's meandering plot and pacy pose has completely won me over
—— Thomas Quinn , Big IssueKushner’s prose dazzles with invention
—— Emily Rhodes , Spectator






