Author:Laurens Van Der Post

This is the story of a South African boy, Peter, who grows to manhood through a hard course of physical and emotional experiences.
The scene, a heroic one, is set both on sea and on land. Peter is exposed to the conflicts set up by other characters, chief amongst whom are a dedicated and fanatical whaling captain, a Zulu stoker, a famous white hunter and his daughter. He learns how men can become obsessed by greed and the will to power; and he witnesses the struggle of natural man to come to terms with the demands of contemporary life.
Peter's developing relationship with captain and crew; the fury and beauty of the chase; the fanaticism of the two great hunters - these are the leading motifs in Laurens van der Post's stirring narrative. His remarkable knowledge of whaling, and the force of his imagination sounding deeper then leviathan himself, carry the reader irresistibly forwards.
If you've never read it, now is the moment. This translation will show that you don't read War and Peace, you live it
—— The TimesThis is, at last, a translation of War and Peace without the dreadful misunderstandings and "improvements" that plague all other translations of the novel into English. Pevear and Volokhonsky's supple and compelling translation is the closest that an English reader without Russian can get to Tolstoy's masterwork. This is a great achievement. It is hard to imagine how this translation could be superseded."
—— Vladimir E. Alexandrov, Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures,It is simply the greatest novel ever written. All human life is in it. If I were told there was time to read only a single book, this would be it
—— Andrew MarrReveals Tolstoy in his majestic scope and precision to this reader for the first time, unencumbered by the pidgin archaisms of previous translations, ringing with mastery and truth
—— Times Literary Supplement, Books of the YearIt may sound pretentious, or strange, but I can remember the weeks (three weeks, to be precise) I spent reading War and Peace as a peak experience of sustained excitement and deep delight. Part of the delight was the largeness and strangeness of this world - the sense of the vastness and extremes of Russia, the unboundedness of everything
—— Finacial TimesThere is a good argument to say that any decent library must make room for War and Peace
—— Independent on SundayWar and Peace... is gleefully experimental... Tolstoy is the greatest miniaturist in the history of the novel. He is economical... [An] outlandish, wonderful novel
—— Adam Thirwell , GuardianThe greatest of all novels. Read it again, to test and savour the infallible truth of Tolstoy’s understanding of every stage and aspect of human life
—— Alan Hollinghurst , New York TimesTo read him . . . is to find one's way home . . . to everything within us that is fundamental and sane
—— Thomas MannIn War And Peace, richly observed human life - its catastrophes and passions, its thrills and tedium - mark out Tolstoy as a fox, who knows all about the dizzying diversity of existence
—— ObserverHighly and deservedly praised...is a remarkable achievement.
—— Contemporary ReviewWonderfully readable
—— Wendy Cope , The WeekTranslators give their wits and craft selflessly in service of others' work; this is a triumph of fidelity and unpretentiousness.
—— The IndependentTom McCarthy's C... a novel blazing with energy and, for all its postmodern ambitions, a rich, old-fashioned yarn
—— Rosie Blau, on being a Booker judge , Financial TimesI surmise that it was because Tom McCarthy's C also hovers on an uneasy breaking-point, between fiction and philosophy, that I wanted it to win the Booker Man prize.
—— Andro Linklater , Spectator, Christmas round upMcCarthy's high-voltage writing runs through the reader like a charge.
—— Frances Wilson , Daily Telegraph, Christmas round upNew readers could grasp just how boldly he has tried to balance sumptuous period-fiction prose with a mischievous desire to sabotage his chosen form.
—— Boyd Tonkin , Independent, Christmas round upAn exciting, revealing and touching story
—— Lesley McDowell , Sunday Herald, Christmas round upThe novel's interest (or lack thereof) lies mainly in its stubborn refusal of anything resembling a narrative payoff...I loved it, right down to the prose, which, unspooling in a vaguely menacing present-continuous, sounds like screenplay instructions to a set designer
—— Anthony Cummins , The TimesA dazzlingly agile novel about the interconnectedness of things
—— MetroEntertaining as well as ambitious
—— The HeraldMcCarthy's descriptions of nature and of the everyday details of the era are vivid, surprising and true. And while the writing is often beautiful and ornate, the story has a bracing, Beckett-like severity
—— Irish Times