Author:John Updike
In a small Pennsylvania town in the late 1940s, schoolteacher George Caldwell yearns to find some meaning in his life. Alone with his teenage son for three days in a blizzard, Caldwell sees his son grow and change as he himself begins to lost touch with his life. Interwoven with the myth of Chiron, the noblest centaur, and his own relationship to Prometheus, The Centaur is one of John Updike's most brilliant and unusual novels.
Provoking, unsettling, ingenious - and a delight to read
—— GuardianErudite and witty... The Fall of Troy skilfully interweaves classical and 19th century stories, employing motifs from both Homer and Charlotte Bronte. This is Ackroyd's most exuberant novel for years
—— Michael Arditti , Daily MailAckroyd imports a Mrs Rochester theme to Turkey, and the denouement has the atmosphere of a thriller, with innocents running for their lives
—— David Horspool , Sunday TimesLurid and generally entertaining drama
—— Sue Gaisford , Independent on SundayThe Fall of Troy is above all a love story, and like the best love stories it deals in obsession, deception, madness and death
—— Elizabeth Speller , IndependentA vivid reimagining of the discovery of what may have been the ancient city of Troy. A thought-provoking novel
—— John Williams , Mail on SundayBeautifully constructed, by turns playful and sinister...this book will haunt the reader's mind
—— Barry Unsworth , Sunday TelegraphIngenious..... briskly told and vividly realised tale... a gripping novel
—— Peter Burton , Daily ExpressAckroyd's atmospheric novel begins with a flourish... [and] gradually turns into an almost Faustian tale
—— Irish TimesGloomy, surprising and intelligent, Ackroyd's pose is sparse and considered and his characterisation is adroit. This is a compelling novel which never gives away more than it has to
—— Philip Womack , The Tablet[A]n insightful portrait of a man with only one mission in life
—— Amy Mathieson , ScotsmanThe Fall of Troy is written in the language of the nineteenth century intellectuals but is lively with it, displaying a directness, clarity and faultless brevity throughout. It warns us that the world is full of Heinrich Obermanns who have decided the meaning of what they might uncover before they have even started to dig
—— Glasgow HeraldPeter 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