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The Benefactor
The Benefactor
Jan 1, 2026 2:17 AM

Author:Susan Sontag

The Benefactor

The Benefactor is Susan Sontag's first book and first novel. It was originally published in 1963, and introduced a unique writer to the world. In the form of a memoir by a latter-day Candide named Hippolyte, The Benefactor leads us on a kind of psychic Grand Tour, in which Hippolyte's violently imaginative dream life becomes indistinguishable from his surprising experiences in the 'real world'.

Reviews

Beautiful, moving and unputdownable

—— Jojo Moyes

Heartbreakingly good

—— Marie Claire

Must read

—— Express

Warm and moving with a nostalgic touch

—— Star

Lisa Jewell just gets better and better

—— Grazia

Enchanting, intriguing and completely unputdownable

—— Katie Fforde

Strange, melancholic, and lyrical, The Raw Man is a novel that will live long in the memory

—— Stephen Joyce , Nudge

Remarkable and breathtaking, Anthony Marra’s A Constellation of Vital Phenomena is a spellbinding elegy for an overlooked land engulfed by an oft forgotten war. Set in the all-too-real Chechen conflict, Marra conjures fragile and heartfelt characters whose fates interrogate the very underpinnings of love and sacrifice

—— Adam Johnson, New York Times bestselling and Pulitzer Prizewinning author of The Orphan Master’s Son

Powerful, convincing, beautifully realized -- it's hard to believe that A Constellation of Vital Phenomena is a first novel. Anthony Marra is a writer to watch and savor

—— TC Boyle

Anthony Marra’s novel, A Constellation of Vital Phenomena, is both devastating and transcendent. The story of eight people (and a nation) navigating two brutal wars, it’s a novel of loyalty and sacrifice and enduring love. You’ll finish it transformed

—— Maile Meloy, author of Both Ways Is the Only Way I Want It

Anthony Marra’s fine debut novel reaches tenderly, unflinchingly, into the center of the Chechnyan conflict of the late 1990s. This tale has its roots in shocking brutality, and its beauty in the human redemption that can come from unaccountable human kindness. Whimsies of circumstance, fate, and the ties of family and faith serve to guide the reader and the characters through a richly layered and deeply beautiful journey

—— Vincent Lam, author of The Headmaster’s Wager

It’s hard to think of an American writer who has so convincingly transported readers into the lives of characters as geopolitically distant as the cast of Chechens whose stories Anthony Marra braids together in A Constellation of Vital Phenomena. Mr. Marra gives us no anchorage in a familiar point-of-view. Instead, he gives us the natives of a peripheral Chechen village, and makes us imagine the world that is their village so convincingly that we forget how remote it is. The novel is a wondrous machine of many moving parts, all whirring together like clockwork, gracefully guiding us backward and forward in time, events unfolding in an order that feels inevitable. His ambitions are Tolstoyan, and he brings stylistic virtuosity to the prose, giving us lyric passages saturated with intelligence and psychological insight. By the end of the novel, we love the characters and grieve with them, and rejoice with the "immense, spinning joy" that is the novel's final note.

—— Whiting Writers' Awards, Selection Committee

A truly impressive debut novel – undeniably grim, but ultimately uplifting – that hints at a stellar future

—— Herald

Anthony Marra’s impressive debut novel…much like Tolstoy’s Chechen novel, Hadji Murad, exudes an air of quiet resignation

—— Independent

An absolute masterpiece... I can't wait to see what's next for this extraordinarily talented young author

—— Sarah Jessica Parker , Entertainment Weekly

resembles the Joseph Heller of Catch-22 and the Jonathan Safran Foer of Everything Is Illuminated

—— Dwight Garner , New York Times

Wonderfully lyrical… Ambitious and moving

—— Kate Saunders , Saga

extraordinary first novel... a 21st-century War and Peace

—— Madison Smartt Bell , New York Times

Both heart wrenching and uplifting, a stunning, intricately plotted, brilliantly written, tour-de-force of a novel that burns into the memory

—— Choice

Mr Marra is trying to capture some essence of the lives of men and women caught in the pincers of a brutal, decade-long war, and at this he succeeds beautifully... its ending is almost certain to leave you choked up and, briefly at least, transformed by tenderness.

—— Sam Sacks , The Wall Street Journal

A Constellation of Vital Phenomena is one of the most accomplished and affecting books I've read in a very long time.

—— Meg Wolitzer , NPR

At the start of Marra's ambitious first novel, set in Chechnya during the Second Chechen War, eight year-old Havaa escapes the Russian soldiers that are carting off her father and flees a home set alight. Marra then plunges into a complex, beautifully crafted series of events, full of secrets and elegant moments, all wreathed in a frozen world.

—— Flavorwire

Some novels defy gravity, spanning years and crossing ruined landscapes and entire solar systems of characters while still maintaining an ethereal, almost impossible lightness. Anthony Marra’s debut novel is one of them, and it does indeed call to mind an astronomical marvel. Taking place in war-ravaged Chechnya across a decade, A Constellation of Vital Phenomena is a stunning debut, following a timid but determined country doctor and the girl he rescues once her father is arrested and presumably killed. Marra elegantly slides across time and perspective, mastering an omniscient voice that reveals each character’s future, present, and past, all in acrobatic sentences that leap through time.

—— The Rumpus

A flash in the heavens that makes you look up and believe in miracles… Here, in fresh, graceful prose, is a profound story that dares to be as tender as it is ghastly… I haven’t been so overwhelmed by a novel in years. At the risk of raising your expectations too high, I have to say you simply must read this book

—— Ron Charles , Washington Post

Marra is a brisk and able story-teller, and he moves deftly between a number of characters who are drawn into contact by the war… The writing is vivid throughout

—— New Yorker

Original, insightful

—— Neil Stewart , Civilian

Witty... ebullient... heartbreaking... our feisty heroine's sparkle never dims

—— i

A truthful, profound snapshot of the kind of life that often gets overlooked. Moving, fresh, enlightening. A fantastic novel

—— Alice , Waterstone's Aberystwyth

A fresh, engaging take on the relationship between rich and poor

—— Wanderlust

A bittersweet coming-of-age tale of displacement during the southern African nation's 'lost decade'

—— Voice

A tale of our time, a powerful condemnation of global inequality from the point of view of a 10-year-old in impossible circumstances... a stunning piece of literary craftsmanship

—— Weekly Telegraph

Bulawayo, whose prose is warm and clear and unfussy, maintains Darling's singular voice throughout, even as her heroine struggles to find her footing. Her hard, funny first novel is a triumph.

—— Entertainment Weekly

Wonderfully, this is a novel whipped with the complexities of African identities in a post-colonial and globalised world and its most compelling theme is that of contemporary displacement, a theme that will resonate with many readers

—— We Sat Down Blog

This is a young author to watch

—— Suzi Feay , Financial Times

This is a very readable tale, thanks to some excellent writing and its central character: a likeable heroine in a difficult world

—— Sarah Warwick , UK Regional Press Syndication

We Need New Names is a distinct and hyper-contemporary treatment of the old You Can’t Go Home Again mould, and the book has more than enough going for it to easily graduate from the Booker longlist to the final six

—— Richard Woolley , Upcoming

deeply felt and fiercely written first novel

—— Scotsman

Bulawayo's novel may scream Africa, but her deft and often comic prose captures memories and tastes, among them the bitterness of disappointment, that transcend borders

—— Jake Flanagin , Atlantic

Bulawayo excels... there is an inevitable nod to Achebe and the verbal delights and child's-eye view of the world is redolent of The God of Small Things. Otherwise, the magic is all Bulawayo's own

—— Literary Review

Proof again that the Caine prize for African writers really knows how to pick a winner… [It’s] a tour de force. Ten-year-old Darling is an unforgettable and necessary new voice: add her to the literary cannon

—— Jackie Kay , Observer

This brilliant novel was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize

—— Marie Claire UK

An exceptionally fine novel, as powerful and memorable as Coetzee's magnificent Disgrace... We need new novels like this – authentic, original and cathartic

—— Judy Moir , Herald

There is no doubt that a new star of African female writing is truly born. The one-to-watch

—— New African

Follow ten-year-old Darling from the Paradise shantytown to America in this searing indictment of Mugabe’s Zimbabwe

—— Patricia Nicol , Metro

Shocking, often heartbreaking – but also pulsing with energy

—— The Times

A poignant, witty, original and lyrical coming of age story

—— Caroline Jowett , Daily Express

Talented and ambitious

—— Helon Habila , Guardian

A powerful fictional condemnation of global inequality

—— Sunday Telegraph

From the opening chapter…the first-person narrative achieves a breathtaking vibrancy, ambition and pathos

—— Irish Examiner

Deserved all the publicity it got

—— Michela Wrong , Spectator
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