Author:Thomas Preskett Prest
Beware the blood-soaked razor of Sweeney Todd, demon barber of Fleet Street!
Johanna Oakley's lover, Mark, has gone missing in suspicious circumstances. And the man who was meant to deliver Mark's last gift to her, a string of pearls, has gone missing too - last seen entering the barber-shop of Sweeney Todd.
In desperation, Johanna decides to dress up as a boy in order to gain access to Todd's premises. There, in a fetid underground crypt, she will discover the grisly truth about what has really happened to Sweeney Todd's unsuspecting customers - and what they have to do with Mrs Lovett, famed maker of the most delicious pies in London ...
Dai Sijie is a wonderful storyteller... [It is] so well done, in such a swift and uncompromising way, that the reader and author and characters feel the simple astonishment of having survived ... the end of the tale is beautifully conclusive and satisfactory
—— A. S. Byatt , GuardianThis shy, complex novel, which speaks its concerns so quietly, remains a forceful lament, infused with incident and dramatic storytelling
—— Julian Evans , The Daily TelegraphIt exercises a subtle and persuasive charm... Its evocation of the distant world of devoted Chinese scholarship and dying artistry is lovingly and enchantingly done
—— Alan Massie , ScotsmanAn elegant, polished, scholarly piece
—— Kate Saunders , The TimesEvokes the past with all the eerie clarity of a dream, its outlines blurred but every tiny, telling detail extraordinarily alive. Anyone in search of a brief history of China would do well to begin right here
—— Margaret Hillenbrand , Financial TimesA rich and poetic novel
—— The Big IssueSijie has produced another cunning literary confection, blending history, romance, a long-lost manuscript and the magic of the Orient... Sijie can still draw readers into his elegant web
—— Mail on SundayDignified and scholarly.
—— Claire Anderson Wheeler , The Irish TimesAcerbically funny
—— Christina Koning , The TimesStill very funny and smartly written a good 20 years after it was first published
—— Colin Waters , Sunday HeraldDense with research and bulging with bombast. Yet, it has to be admitted, it's also great fun
—— Hermione Hoby , ObserverI read this novel at the end of the 1980s when greed and excess were rife, and the merger barons were making loads of money. As someone working in the City, I loved how it perfectly captured the voraciously materialistic mood. Wolfe portrays his characters with wit and accuracy.
—— Madeleine Gore , Easy LivingA page-turner
—— Daily Express