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The 13.5 Lives Of Captain Bluebear
The 13.5 Lives Of Captain Bluebear
Dec 23, 2025 4:43 AM

Author:Walter Moers,John Brownjohn

The 13.5 Lives Of Captain Bluebear

A delightfully illustrated cult novel, literary satire and epic adventure.

'Within the first 15 pages I was carried away by the sheer craziness of it all. Some Minipirates find a baby bear with blue fur inside a walnut shell floating on the ocean towards a giant whirlpool. They rescue him and teach him about knots and waves, and that a good white lie is often considerably more exciting than the truth. Then, when he outgrows their ship to such an extent that he is in danger of sinking it, they abandon him on an island with a bottle of seaweed juice and a loaf of seaweed bread. Thus Bluebear comes to the end of his first life and embarks on his second. By the end of the book, he has expended exactly half of his 27 lives. Again and again, Moers confounds our expectations as the narrative twists and turns, travels backwards and forwards in time. Part science fiction, part fairy tale, part myth, part epic, the book is a satire on all these genres and so constantly satirises itself. Very amusing' - Daily Telegraph

Reviews

A yarn of drollery, deeper meaning and sheer lunacy

—— Rolling Stone

Sheer craziness

—— Daily Telegraph

The most entertaining book in years

—— Frankfurter Allemeine Zt

Moers' creative mind is like J. K. Rowling on ecstasy

—— Detroit News

a potent picture of servant life in plantation America.

—— Sainsburys Magazine

Some people might be saying the latest David Mitchell book or the most recent Martin Amis, but for me, so far, The Lonely Polygamist is the novel of 2010

—— Book Munch

Udall, author of the well regarded The Miracle Life of Edgar Mint, posesses a comic touch that is occassionally reminiscent of Richard Russo or John Irving. And while his style is usually as effortlessly plain-spoken as the people he depicts, he is capable of impressive rhetorical flights

—— Stephen Amidon , Sunday Times

Udall is the real thing: a writer with an instinctive feel for the human condition worthy of Steinbeck or Twain

—— Daily Telegraph

At every turn, Udall plays with his readers' expectations of believers and non-believers, husbands and wives...That this longish book is kept largely aloft by a structure of humorous conceits is an indication of the author's strengths as a storyteller.

—— Emma Hagestadt , Independent

Irving writes with clarity and compassion about the Aids epidemic: his forensic detailing of this merciless disease is deeply affecting

—— Irish Times

Crammed with Irving's signature cleverness

—— The Scotsman

This tender exploration of nascent desire, of love and loss, manages to be sweeping, brilliant, political, provocative, tragic and funny - it is precisely the kind of astonishing alchemy we associate with a John Irving novel. A profound truth is arrived at in these pages. It is Irving at his most daring, at his most ambitious. It is America and American writing, both at their very best

—— Abraham Verghese

In One Person is a novel that makes you proud to be human. It is a book that not only accepts but also loves our differences. From the beginning of his career Irving has always cherished our peculiarities - in a fierce, not a saccharine way. Now he has extended his sympathies - and ours - still further into areas that even the misfits eschew. John Irving in this magnificent novel - his best and most passionate since The World According to Garp - has sacralized what lies between polarizing genders and orientations. And have I mentioned it is also a gripping page-turner and a beautifully constructed work of art?

—— Edmund White

A quietly compelling and provocative work

—— Sunday Business Post

A dark and sinewy novel, written with sparse clarity and affecting subtlety

—— Stuart Evers , Observer Books of the Year

In a year marked by epics, it's a relief to delve into this quiet, surprisingly tense debut novel - small enough to stuff in a stocking but packing a huge emotional punch

—— Entertainment Weekly

A novel of subtle beauty and quiet grace; I found myself hanging on every simple word, as tense about the consequences of a man finding an apartment as if I were reading about a man defusing a bomb. ... It is one of the best novels I have read in a long time. ... With elegant restraint, Baxter layers the narratives, anecdotes and experiences in the manner of life as continuous essay, the topic of which might be stated as, "What is a right way to be in the world?" ... It is very much to Baxter's credit that he presents this struggle as if it were thriller, love story, philosophical novel and dark comedy combined, in a novel not liek a bullet but like an arrow flying straight to the heart of the matter.

—— New York Times Book Review

A quiet and powerful read through and through. Baxter's clean and direct prose generates its own momentum. He chooses not to create a tidy drama where characters are explained by their pasts. Rather, he creates something bigger and more true.

—— Daily Beast

Compelling ... captures the mood of the current moment and what seems to be a new "lost generation", one formed not so much by exposure to violence, as immunity to and alienation from it. Once upon a time, there was no place like home; in Mr. Baxter's world, home, it seems, is no place.

—— New York Times

Absorbing, atmospheric and enigmatic ... With its disorienting juxtaposition of the absolutely ordinary and the strange and vaguely threatening, the novel evokes the work of Franz Kafka and Haruki Murakami, while its oblique explorations of memory suggest a debt to W.G. Sebald

—— Los Angeles Times

A thrilling follow-up to Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island...Silver is a novel that will appeal to readers of all ages. Beautifully written and genuinely exciting...Best of all, Motion’s novel stays true to Stevenson’s original tale while adding an extra dimension.

—— Emma Lee-Potter , Daily Express

Elegant, thrilling sequel...The plot is gripping, a mixture of high adventure, low cunning and desperation...Motion’s prose vivid and glowingly poetic, is a brilliant counterpoint to the fascinating action.

—— Eithne Farry , Daily Mail

This is a pacey tale with an appropriately feisty young heroine for modern readers

—— Lesley McDowell , Independent on Sunday

Andrew Motion brings lyricism but, more importantly, rollicking adventure to this sequel to Treasure Island

—— Mail on Sunday
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