Author:Katherine Mansfield
Henry is naive and has never experienced love. When he meets golden-haired Edna in a train carriage, however, his world changes forever. But the intensity of their feelings threatens their innocence, and Edna knows she is too young to leave her childhood behind.
United by the theme of love, the writings in the Great Loves series span over two thousand years and vastly different worlds. Readers will be introduced to love’s endlessly fascinating possibilities and extremities: romantic love, platonic love, erotic love, gay love, virginal love, adulterous love, parental love, filial love, nostalgic love, unrequited love, illicit love, not to mention lost love, twisted and obsessional love…
Nicci Gerrard writes of ordinary people and gets — under their skins and she'll get under yours too
—— In StyleThis is turbocharged; someone has put a rocket under Jacobson and the result is scintillating....Jacobson is quite simply a master of comic precision. He writes like a dream, with a complete mastery of technique...He can have you in stitches either with a long, beautifully timed paragraph or with a mere two words...
—— Nick Lezard , Evening StandardThe raging, contentious, hilarious, holy, deicidal, heartbreaking Kalooki Nights is a novel that stands toe-to-toe with the greats
—— Christopher Cleave , Sunday TelegraphKalooki Nights is a book to laugh at, learn from and argue with
—— David Horspool , The TimesVery funny...a rich, dense book...not so much like reading a novel as sharing a train carriage with its narrator...There is much to learn and a good deal to enjoy
—— SpectatorKalooki Nights is far and away Jacobson's most ambitious, most fully realised and, above all, most entertaining novel. For its near reckless bravery it deserves some kind of literary VC
—— Tom Rosenthal , Independent on SundayDevelops into a profound and despairing examination of modern life
—— David Annand , Scotland on SundayThis is a welcome return to the bittersweet Yiddish-inspired humour at which Jacobson excels, and which has rightly earned him comparisons with Philip Roth...a gloriously pugnacious novel which, not unlike the fiction of Kingsley Amis in his pomp, wants to take on all-comers
—— Bryan Cheyette , GuardianIt is likely to be the funniest book published this year...prose sharper and brighter than any of his contemporaries...The jacket says Jacobson has won just one prize for his novels...[Kalooki Nights] deserves to redress the injustices meted out on its author
—— ObserverBroadsheet reviewers had praised it as a 'work of genius' - and they were right. The book is Jacobson's masterpiece. The writing is flawless, with the author's trademark blending of tragedy and comedy. A ferocious intelligence courses through it, reminiscent of Philip Roth at his 'Counterlife' best
—— Jonathan Freedland , Jewish ChronicleThe biggest laugh and the biggest cry since Angela Carter's Small Children
—— Simon Schama , Books of the Year, ObserverA wonderful surprise
—— Leo Robson , New StatesmanPeter Ackroyd takes the reader, in his usual compelling, elegant style, back to Heinrich Schliemann's excavation of that ancient city
—— Erica Wagner , The TimesObermann is a lively creation
—— Scotland on Sunday