Author:F Scott Fitzgerald
'In his blue gardens men and girls came and went like moths among the whisperings and the champagne and the stars'
The world and his mistress are at Jay Gatsby's party. But Gatsby stands apart from the crowd, isolated by a secret longing. In between sips of champagne his guests speculate about their mysterious host. Some say he's a bootlegger. Others swear he was a German spy during the war. They lean in and whisper 'he killed a man once'. Just where is Gatsby from and what is the obsession that drives him?
VINTAGE DECO: Nine blazing, daring novels to celebrate the 1920s - 100 years on.
The Great Gatsby remains not just one of the greatest works of American literature, but a timeless evocation of the allure, corruption and carelessness of wealth...a gilded society intoxicated by wealth, dancing its way into the Great Depression.
—— The TimesGatsby is a connoisseur's guide to the glamour and glitter of the Jazz Age, but it's also a nearly prophetic glimpse into the world to come. Writing at the height of the boom, in the midst of the Roaring Twenties, Fitzgerald detected the ephemerality, fakery and corruption always lurking at the heart of the great American success story... A haunting meditation on aspiration, disillusionment, romantic love - and a blistering exposé of the materialism, duplicity, and sexual politics driving what Fitzgerald calls America's true "business": "the service of a vast, vulgar, and meretricious beauty"
—— Sarah Churchwell, , The TimesIt is a marvellously suggestive novel...a parable of modern America, and by extension of modern life
—— AN Wilson, , Daily TelegraphThe first and greatest modern novel, it has beautiful women, lavish parties, romance, betrayal and murder woven together in an intricately structured plot. A prescient comment on the dying days of a gilded age that is brilliant entertainment with a very eloquent insight
—— MirrorHis masterpiece, an elegy for the American Dream, the greatest lost cause of them all
—— Los Angeles TimesHis glorious prose captures ephemeral glamour magically
—— IndependentHis talent was as natural as the pattern that was made by the dust on a butterfly's wings
—— Ernest HemingwayRead it again, forever
—— Boston GlobePowers is . . . a wizard when it comes to telling us about trees, rivers, insects and birds
—— SpectatorExtraordinary . . . Powers's insightful, often poetic prose draws us at once more deeply toward the infinitude of the imagination
—— New York TimesRemarkable . . . channels both the cosmic sublime and that of the vast American outdoors
—— ObserverMingling ideas about neurodivergence, astrobiology, political radicalisation and environmental collapse... There is no question that Powers is a novelist of considerable, well, powers.... Bewilderment is both touching and finely written
—— TelegraphReading a Powers novel is like boarding a tour bus when you have a single day to explore an unfamiliar city. Bewilderment, his Booker-longlisted new novel, is a hop-on, hop-off trip around astrobiology, climate breakdown and neuro-feedback therapy... it is impossible to deny the importance of Powers's message
—— Sunday TimesPowers is a former computer programmer whose ideas-rich fiction grounds the grandest scientific concepts in everyday experience. For him, environmental crisis means that we must share the pain not just of fellow-humans but other life-forms threatened by our botched stewardship of Earth.... Powers's unchained imagination stretches its empathy circle from lichen to nebulae, in finely crafted prose
—— Financial TimesRefreshing, original and moving
—— Evening StandardPowers has the rare gift of being able to deal with big ideas while keeping you interested in the lives and emotions of his characters
—— Sebastian FaulksA heartfelt cry for climate awareness, with fantastical digressions to other planets and a rueful celebration of our own
—— GuardianIt's a wonderful story - taut, touching and wholehearted
—— PsychologiesIntense and disturbing
—— Mail on SundayA beautiful and thoughtfully written novel
—— Good HousekeepingImpressively precise in its scientific conjectures, Bewilderment is no less rich or wise in its emotionality.... channels both the cosmic sublime and that of the vast American outdoors, resting confidently in a lineage with Thoreau and Whitman, Dillard and Kerouac... Sorrowing awe is Bewilderment's primary tone, and its many remarkable scenes are controlled with high novelistic intelligence.
—— ObserverIt's deftly crafted, packs an emotional punch, and Powers's urgent environmental message, delivered by the Greta Thunberg-like Robin, comes through loud and clear
—— Daily MailPowers is extremely good at creating a very specific emotion in the reader: a potent mix of sadness and guilt. He's also a wizard when it comes to telling us about trees, rivers, insects and birds
—— SpectatorBewilderment is a compelling story about love in a dying world
—— Irish IndependentPowers succeeds in engaging both head and heart. And through its central story of bereavement, this novel of parenting and the environment becomes a multifaceted exploration of mortality
—— EconomistIt is a thoughtful exploration of individual grief, a study in empathy for the biosphere, a questioning of the medical profession's pathologising of children and a beginner's guide to eco-biology... Bewilderment is both cerebral and heartfelt, a rigorous and damning assessment of the state of the world today. A call to arms for empathy and action
—— Irish TimesUtterly absorbing
—— Daily MailOne of our most lavishly gifted writers
—— New YorkerNothing less than brilliant
—— John UpdikeIt's not possible for Powers to write an uninteresting book
—— Margaret AtwoodWith its first few pages, Powers' novel completely captivated us and with its last, it bowled us over. Powers creates a texture and specificity to our future that feels simultaneously sweepingly large and breathtakingly intimate, told through the most relatable point of view: the ferocious love of a parent for his child and his struggle to provide him a better tomorrow.
—— Leigh Kittay, Black Bear’s Head of FilmOn The Overstory: It changed how I thought about the Earth and our place in it . . . It changed how I see things and that's always, for me, a mark of a book worth reading.
—— Barack ObamaOn The Overstory: Really, just one of the best novels, period
—— Ann PatchettOn The Overstory: Monumental . . . breath-taking . . . a gigantic fable of genuine truths
—— Barbara KingsolverOn The Overstory: Exhilarating . . . on almost every page you will find sentences that combine precision and vision
—— The TimesOn The Overstory: The best book I've read in ten years. A remarkable piece of literature
—— Emma ThompsonOn The Overstory: An extraordinary novel . . . an astonishing performance . . . he is incredibly good at turning science into poetry
—— GuardianThe success of the story - and a success it is - comes not from the ingenious scientific speculations, nor the shrewd literary connections (on the "emotional telepathy" of a work of art, or Daniel Keyes's Flowers for Algernon), but the human story between father and son, as Theo finds out 'how my brain learns to resemble what it loves
—— The CriticRichard Powers's Booker Prize-shortlisted novel is both brutal and heartwarming, intimate and profound. A masterfully curated story of love, grief and loneliness, quietly building to an inevitable and devastating close
—— Press AssociationHe composes some of the most beautiful sentences I've ever read. I'm in awe of his talent
—— Oprah WinfreyIn Bewilderment, the Pulitzer Prize-winning American novelist has crafted a story of great beauty and power
—— Business Post