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The Dig
The Dig
Aug 15, 2025 9:55 PM

Author:John Preston

The Dig

A brilliantly realised account of the most famous archeological dig in British history, now a major motion picture starring Ralph Fiennes, Carey Mulligan and Lily James.

'Exquisitely original' Ian MacEwan

'An enthralling story of love and loss' Robert Harris

In the long hot summer of 1939 Britain is preparing for war. But on a riverside farm in Suffolk there is excitement of another kind: Mrs Pretty, the widowed farmer, has had her hunch proved correct that the strange mounds on her land hold buried treasure. As the dig proceeds against a background of mounting national anxiety, it becomes clear that this is no ordinary find...

John Preston's recreation of the Sutton Hoo dig - the greatest Anglo-Saxon discovery ever in Britain - brilliantly and comically dramatizes three months of intense activity when locals fought outsiders, professionals thwarted amateurs, and love and rivalry flourished in equal measure.

'A tale of rivalry, loss and thwarted love so absorbing that I read right through lunchtime one day, and it's not often I miss a meal' Nigella Lawson

'A delicate evocation of a vanished era' Sunday Times

Reviews

'Very fine, engrossing, exquisitely original'

—— Ian McEwan

'An enthralling story of love and loss, a real literary treasure. One of the most original novels of the year'

—— Robert Harris

'You don't need to be in archaeology - this is a tale of rivalry, loss and thwarted love. It's so absorbing that I read right through lunchtime one day, and it's not often I miss a meal'

—— Nigella Lawson

'A rich vein of dry humour runs throughout'

—— Evening Standard

'Intriguing, tender and entertaining ... easily Preston's best'

—— Independent

'A delicate, quietly affecting human drama'

—— Daily Mail

'A moving novel that coheres wonderfully as it progresses'

—— Spectator

'A delicate evocation of a vanished era'

—— Sunday Times

Wonderful, evocative. From this simple tale of dirt, Preston has produced the finest gold. He keeps an iron grip on the reader's attention

—— Observer

'Beautifully written...there is a true and wonderful ending to the story'

—— Bill Wyman , Mail on Sunday

'Wistful and poignant. A masterpiece in Chekhovian understatement'

—— Times Literary Supplement

'Exciting, evocative and beautifully written. A treasure in itself'

—— Griff Rhys Jones

'Shimmers with longing and regret . . . Preston writes with economical grace . . . He has written a kind of universal chamber piece, small in detail, beautifully made and liable to linger on in the heart and the mind. It is something utterly unfamiliar, and quite wonderful'

—— Michael Pye , The New York Times Book Review

[It] is pleasingly baffling, suggesting hidden depths and multiple layers without ever quite revealing them.

—— Alex Preston , Observer, Book of the Year

What stands out, and stays with you, is the fable-like aura which makes this feel like a children’s book for adults.

—— Theo Hobson , Tablet, Book of the Year

Coetzee doesn’t want to be understood, or explained. He wants, merely, to be read. The Schooldays of Jesus is, indeed, very readable.

—— John Sutherland , The Times

The prose is limpid, the plot simple, the style hypnotic, but what it all means I wouldn’t like to say.

—— Simon Shaw , Mail on Sunday
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