Author:Guy Burt
I used to think that perhaps everything that was happening to me - my whole life - was just a memory. As if one moment I could be eleven, and playing in the sun, and the next I might - wake up, somehow, and find I was old and dying, and the day when I was eleven was just a bright, clear memory...
Alex is an artist, preparing for an exhibition to mark the peak of his career. His life seems ordered and complete, but an impulsive trip back to the Italy of his childhood forces him to explore the unresolved questions of his past. There, in those seemingly innocent days, as he swam and played and explored the wild countryside with Jamie and Anna, Alex must surely find the key to so much of his later life. He has to experience again his first friendship with Jamie, and his first love for Anna; and to put together the pieces of a story which brought the three of them together more closely than they could understand, with a bond which seemed innocent but which resulted in tragedy.
In this disturbing new novel Guy Burt explores the darker side of childhood love and friendship, and the fear and pain of growing up.
Of Guy Burt's first novel, After The Hole, the critics wrote:
'A scintillating début...Burt's will be a name to watch' - Daily Mail
'Compulsively sinister first novel ' - The Times
'Insidiously brilliant' - The Independent
In Runaway Horses Mishima writes of a desire to destroy or subvert beauty at its height, thus strengthening its appeal and preventing its slow decay
—— New York TimesOne of the great writers of the twentieth century
—— Los Angeles TimesMishima's novels exude a monstrous and compulsive weirdness, and seem to take place in a kind of purgatory for the depraved
—— Angela CarterThis tetralogy is considered one of Yukio Mishima's greatest works. It could also be considered a catalogue of Mishima's obsessions with death, sexuality and the samurai ethic. Spanning much of the 20th century, the tetralogy begins in 1912 when Shigekuni Honda is a young man and ends in the 1960s with Honda old and unable to distinguish reality from illusion. En route, the books chronicle the changes in Japan that meant the devaluation of the samurai tradition and the waning of the aristocracy
—— Washington PostMishima succeeded, unlike any other writer before him, in creating a glittering alloy of Eastern and Western traditions, classical and contemporary forms
—— New York TimesJapan's foremost man of letters
—— SpectatorAn epic of a novel...in some ways better than Birdsong, or at least more subtle and far ranging
—— Country LifeThis is a bold and remarkable work of imagination, particularly in its daring remastery of the 19th-century novel form and the sustained grace of its prose. To write so well for so many hundreds of pages is an amazing feat of intellectual athleticism
—— Jane Shilling , Sunday TelegraphFaulks has woven dozens of compelling voices together to produce an extraordinary novel of magnificent scope
—— Jonathan Ree , Evening Standard[S]tructurally intricate, yet intensely focused on the lives of individuals...Human Traces is replete with interesting ideas and contains some exceptionally fine topographic writing
—— Jane Stevenson , ObserverOne of the most impressive novelists of his generation
—— Sunday Telegraph