Author:Michel Houellebecq,Shaun Whiteside
LONGLISTED FOR THE INTERNATIONAL BOOKER PRIZE 2020
A powerful criticism of modern life by one of the most provocative and prophetic writers of our age
Florent-Claude Labrouste is dying of sadness. Despised by his girlfriend and on the brink of career failure, his last hope for relief comes in the form of a newly available antidepressant that alters the brain's release of serotonin.
When he returns to the Normandy countryside in search of serenity, he instead finds a rural community left behind by globalisation and red-tape agricultural policies, with local farmers longing for an impossible return towhat they remember as a golden age.
'Despite its provocations, this is a novel of romantic and sorrowful ideas: Houellebecq as troubadour, singing lost loves' Rachel Kushner
Michel Houellebecq has good claim to be the most interesting novelist of our times. . . Exhilarating in its nihilism, often very funny and always enjoyable' Evening Standard
Exhilarating in its nihilism, often very funny and always enjoyable… Serotonin burns with anger… [Michel Houellebecq is] the most interesting novelist of our times’
—— Evening StandardHouellebecq has once again managed to put his finger on modern French (and Western) society’s wounds, and it hurts
—— EconomistAny new book by Houellebecq is guaranteed to make waves, and Serotonin is no exception ... A bleak, uncompromising novel. But it also feels like an important one, asking some necessary questions in characteristically mordant fashion
—— Mail on SundayA cautionary tale about dissipated manhood… Houellebecq may be, in certain respects, a man for our times
—— Literary ReviewWhile Houellebecq is provocative and at times deliberately controversial, his success is not based solely on his ability to shock. He also has a beautiful fluid writing style…and an uncanny ability to evoke the spleen that for him is at the core of existence
—— Irish TimesThe author’s prescience has certainly proved as eerie as his reported politics are contentious, yet Serotonin’s brilliance far exceeds its accuracy as a cultural barometer… Houellebecq is a disarmingly rich and nuanced writer; Serotonin is mordant, haunting but never (quite) embittered
—— Lisa Hilton , TLSDespite its provocations, this is a novel of romantic and sorrowful ideas: Houellebecq as troubadour, singing lost loves
—— Rachel KushnerHouellebecq has a sociological curiosity few other novelists possess... The agony and rage of the demoted, the discarded, the “deplorable” (a segment of them, if not the whole basket), laid bare. What other novelist would have the willingness to go there, let alone the wherewithal
—— GuardianTo some, he is the only serious writer prepared to look at disagreeable aspects of the modern world – sex tourism, radical Islam, airports, free markets, pornography ... [Houellebecq’s] novels have a journalistic knack of chiming with events
—— Sunday TimesHouellebecq’s disdain for the emptiness of modern western life often leaves him spookily ahead of the game ... The satirist carves up the branded ghastliness of restaurants, hotels, supermarkets and the like with a steady butcher’s hand
—— Financial TimesHouellebecq is a supreme chronicler of the psyche of modern European man
—— SpikedHouellebecq’s vision in his new novel, Serotonin, is blacker and sharper than ever…in Shaun Whiteside’s English translation, Houellebecq has never sounded more fluent
—— iConsistently intelligent and compulsively readable... [Amis] applies his insight and curiosity as a novelist to this stylish and genuine account of his development as a writer. The result reaches the heights of his finest work.
—— Publishers Weekly *STARRED REVIEW*Profoundly moving... If Experience was Amis elucidating the visible events of his life, the one-10th of the iceberg sitting above the waterline, then this book is a dark and tender exploration of the part that lies submerged.
—— Richard Strachan , Herald ScotlandYou really feel that in this book you are getting to the heart of one of the most remarkable writers of our time.
—— Jake Kerridge , Sunday Express[Martin Amis is a] master chronicler of the male condition.
—— Bill Prince , Daily TelegraphAs always with Amis the prose is beautiful, expressive, and precisely engineered... The book is a boundless treasure filled with hilarious anecdotes, heart-wrenching confessions, and eye-opening revelations.
—— Joshua Whitehead , MancunionA deeply engaging 'novelised autobiography' that focuses on love and death... Wonderfully readable, rich in the familiar Amis pleasures of wit, insight, and well-formed anecdotes. An intriguing, often brilliant addition to a storied career.
—— Kirkus *STARRED REVIEW*The unexpected gift of Inside Story comes under the heading of "How to Write". Amis reliably provides synaptic pleasure whenever he pauses to give one of his didactic asides about the English language. It would be worth compiling these in a volume to stand alongside Kingsley's The King's English.
—— Thomas Meaney , New StatesmanIn Amis's writing, [there is] that brilliant observational gift for ironies... There are perfectly crafted scenes that capture the creeping shocks of mortality.
—— Tim Adams , ObserverIt is always a pleasure to read Martin Amis... [Inside Story] is a generous book in sharing so much with its readers... Brilliant.
—— Lynn Barber , Daily TelegraphAn account [of Larkin is] written with such empathy and insight that it is truly harrowing... grandly resonant, brilliantly suggestive.
—— Edmund Gordon , Times Literary SupplementThe book's most solemn task is perhaps that of honouring the dead...and this it accomplishes beautifully.
—— Keith Miller , Literary Review[In Inside Story] humour and illumination flow.
—— Janan Ganesh , Financial TimesSad and funny... Utterly compelling on grief.
—— Alex Clark , GuardianThis is a celebration of his [Amis's] life in all its exuberant brilliance and melancholy moments.
—— BURO[Inside Story displays] compelling insights and observations, courage, tenderness; and above all, an undimmed passion for the written word.
—— Dan Brotzel , UK Press SyndicationFascinating... Martin Amis at his best, and that is very good indeed.
—— David Herman , Jewish ChronicleInside Story is something particular, something unique... the tenor of his writing...about Israel, the Holocaust and 9/11 reveals a different Amis, and is the source of some of the book's best passages.
—— Neil McCarthy , SpikedCaptivating and moving.
—— Tablet, *Summer Reads of 2021*Moving... Beneath the attention-seeking is a well-loved author who has gone through his cupboards, giving us all that he has.
—— Johanna Thomas-Corr , Sunday TimesA defiant and witty testimony to mortality and a tender remembrance of his friends and literary heroes… I’ve been reading and re-reading it this year
—— Times Literary Supplement, *Books of the Year*Continues in the same superior vein as Restoration… The fusion of such an engrossing character, and the minutiae of another time, remains a marvel
—— Daily TelegraphIn this evocative and beautifully drawn novel of family and loyalty in the face of an uncertain future Tremain continues the story of a wonderfully unique character
—— Hannah Britt , Daily ExpressHugely enjoyable
—— Reader's DigestMerivel’s hapless charm remains intact in this tour de force of literary technique
—— Sunday Telegraph (Seven)A sequel that looks back to the earlier novel without ever quite recapturing its spirit is the perfect form in which to evoke that feeling of having to carry on, and of trying to make yourself have fun even with it eventually begins to hurt
—— Colin Burrow , GuardianA marvelllously rollicking good read, and it is such a pleasure to meet Robert Merivel again. Rose Tremain brings the character to life in a way that makes you want to find out even more about the period. Enormously skilled and deft
—— Good Book Guide