Author:Zachary Lazar
Three dramatic and emblematic stories intertwine in Sway - the early days of the Rolling Stones; the life of avant-garde filmmaker Kenneth Anger; and the community of Charles Manson and his followers. Together they illuminate a decade's rise and fall; its gods and devils; and a particular hour in American history when many young revellers seeking joy, fellowship and liberation fell under a darker spell, leading to unprovoked and inexplicable violence.
Lazar's hugely impressive achievement is to evoke the energy of an over-documented time in a new way... As dark and enigmatic as its central subjects, Sway often feels like a whole new genre of folklore fiction...it's irresistible
—— Daily MailDark, intricate eulogy to the bloody death of Sixties idealism
—— EsquireLazar is a clever enough writer to let his juxtapositions and cross-cuts do the work: indeed his visual imagination pervades
—— Times Literary SupplementReveals Lazar to be a considerable talent
—— GuardianSway is a study of layers of manipulation and control: Manson over his credulous followers; the Stones over their audience; Anger's attempt to harness the forces of magic... Casts a haunting spell over the reader
—— Daily TelegraphA new folklore removed from the heady image of the 1960s ... it's only a vision of reality but Lazar certainly makes it a believable one
—— MetroLazar's empathetic reconstructions attain a psychologically astute solidity and we are vouchsafed a glimpse of the worlds the protagonists dreamed and then cocooned themselves in
—— New StatesmanZachary Lazar's superb second novel, "Sway, " reads like your parents' nightmare idea of what would happen to you if you fell under the spell of rock 'n' roll...Elegant and intricate...this brilliant novel is about what's to be found in the shadows, the most terrifying crannies of twisted souls, the darkest gleaming gems
—— Charles Taylor , New York Times Book ReviewScintillating intelligence... [A] brilliant portrayl of life as a legend
—— Margot LiveseyA coruscating, kaleidoscopic vision of the 60s, Lazar's Sway is at once an intimate re-imagining of iconic figures and an expansive meditation on an epoch that reverberates to this day. An enthralling read, shot through with flashes of edgy beauty and dark wisdom
—— Peter Ho Davies, author of The Welsh GirlJoseph Conrad said that fiction is primarily a visual art; he would have loved Zachary Lazar's Sway for the thousand indelible visual details of a startling originality - and for Lazar's ability to shine a light into the contemporary heart of darkness
—— Edmund WhiteA hilarious and compelling read
—— Good Housekeeping