Author:Leifur Eiricksson
The Saga of the Greenlanders and Eirik the Red’s Saga contain the first ever descriptions of North America, a bountiful land of grapes and vines, discovered by Vikings five centuries before Christopher Columbus. Written down in the early thirteenth century, they recount the Icelandic settlement of Greenland by Eirik the Red, the chance discovery by seafaring adventurers of a mysterious new land, and Eirik’s son Leif the Lucky’s perilous voyages to explore it. Wrecked by storms, stricken by disease and plagued by navigational mishaps, some survived the North Atlantic to pass down this compelling tale of the first Europeans to talk with, trade with, and war with the Native Americans.
It’s been a long time since I picked up a book so impossible to put down. Furious Hours made me forget dinner, ignore incoming calls, and stay up reading into the small hours. It’s a work of literary and legal detection as gripping as a thriller. But it’s also a meditation on motive and mystery, the curious workings of history, hope, and ambition, justice, and the darkest matters of life and death. Casey Cep’s investigation into an infamous Southern murder trial and Harper Lee’s quest to write about it is a beautiful, sobering, and sometimes chilling triumph.
—— Helen Macdonald, author of 'H is for Hawk'This story is just too good ... Furious Hours builds and builds until it collides with the writer who saw the power of Maxwell’s story, but for some reason was unable to harness it. It lays bare the inner life of a woman who had a world-class gift for hiding ... [this] book makes a magical leap, and it goes from being a superbly written true-crime story to the sort of story that even Lee would have been proud to write.
—— Michael Lewis, author of 'Moneyball' and 'The Big Short'Fascinating ... Cep has spliced together a Southern-gothic tale of multiple murder and the unhappy story of Lee’s literary career, to produce a tale that is engrossing in its detail and deeply poignant... [Cep] spends the first third of Furious Hours following the jaw-dropping trail of murders ... Engrossing ... Cep writes about all this with great skill, sensitivity and attention to detail.
—— Sunday TimesWith its rich cast of characters, the polar opposite settings of New York and rural Alabama, Cep’s dark humour and painstaking research, there is a great deal to enjoy ... a rich and rewarding read.
—— The TimesA triumph on every level. One of the losses to literature is that Harper Lee never found a way to tell a gothic true-crime story she’d spent years researching. Casey Cep has excavated this mesmerizing story and tells it with grace and insight and a fierce fidelity to the truth.
—— David Grann, author of 'Killers of the Flower Moon'It’s one measure of just how rich Casey Cep’s material is, and how artfully she handles it, that I have given away only about a tenth of the interest and delight contained within the first third of her book ... [Casey Cep] explains as well as it is likely ever to be explained why Lee went silent after To Kill a Mockingbird
—— New York TimesGripping but always judicious ... Cep persuasively argues that the appeal of all this to Lee went well beyond that of a cracking story ... Almost every individual part of the book rattles along compulsively, while also providing some neat and telling changes of perspective. As well as the enthralling central story, there’s plenty of great stuff on the always eye-popping business of southern politics. And perhaps best of all, Furious Hours triumphantly rescues Harper Lee from the myth she’s been in danger of disappearing into - and restores her to full and recognisable human life.
—— Daily Telegraph[An] intriguing book … What gives Furious Hours its frisson is that the author who hoped to follow in Capote’s footsteps was his old friend, Harper Lee … Cep ably takes on the task that Lee may or may not have abandoned … Ms Cep paints a portrait of a hermetic society still riven by prejudice … Then she pieces together Lee’s struggle not only with Maxwell’s tale but with the legacy of her overwhelming success … Furious Hours is a well-told, ingeniously structured double mystery – one an unsolved serial killing, the other an elusive book – rich in droll humour and deep but lightly worn research.
—— EconomistAccomplished and compelling ... All this is gold-dust for a writer, and Cep has used it well ... She draws a vivid portrait of the characters embroiled in these dreadful crimes, the community they affected, and the rekindling of Lee’s writing they promised.
—— HeraldThe makings of a fascination tale are certainly present, and Cep writes with wonderful evocation and intelligence about the racial, political and cultural backgrounds against which this drama too place … Casey Cep has elegantly filled in the gaps.
—— Sarah Churchwell , SpectatorLee spent many years working on the project, but it never saw the light of day. Instead, more than four decades later, we have Cep’s absorbing new volume, which succeeds in telling the story that Nelle Harper Lee could not and offers an affecting account of Lee’s attempt to give meaning to a startling series of events … It’s a rich, ambitious, beautifully written book … A gifted journalist who has written frequently for the New Yorker, Cep has imposed order here by providing biographical portraits of three figures: Maxwell, Radney and Lee. Each section moves the intrigue forward while rendering the lives of these real people, and the forces at work within them, as fully and fairly as possible … The result is a revealing triptych, one that tells a crime story but also says a great deal about the racial, cultural and political history of the South. As a portrayal of the life of a writer, the section on Lee is by itself worth the price of admission.
—— Washington PostA brilliant account of Harper Lee’s failed attempt to write a true crime book … Along the way, Cep relates the history of courthouses, voodoo, and everything one needs to know about the insanity defence … Meticulously researched, this is essential reading for anyone interested in [Harper] Lee and American literary history.
—— Publishers Weekly[A] stunning tale
—— Nilanjana Roy , Financial TimesCasey Cep’s painstakingly researched book is a gripping account of both the trial and Lee’s obsession with it.
—— ObserverCasey Cep has created a book that’s totally astounding and deeply moving.
—— StylistAstounding
—— Emerald StreetSuperb, sparklingly intelligent
—— Daily TelegraphIn Furious Hours, her brilliant and gripping account, Casey Cep details and analyses [Harper] Lee’s increasingly desperate efforts to write that second book … Furious Hours is probably the nearest we will get to the book Harper Lee tried so hard to complete. It is a tacit tribute to Harper Lee but even more, an attempt, largely successful, to bring her abandoned project to final fruition … A book of compelling portraits … Cep’s narrative swarms with other characters, all credibly realised in their often cantankerous and eccentric ways … Painstakingly researched and beautifully written.
—— Times Literary SupplementIt’s as gripping as a thriller and as coolly dissected as a forensics report.
—— Robert Doulgas-Fairhurst , The SpectatorThe inside scoop on Harper Lee’s long, post-Mockingbird silence. After working with Truman Capote on his true-crime book In Cold Blood, Lee attempted something similar, taking a murderous preacher, the Rev Willie Maxwell, as her subject. Despite years of research, Lee never produced a book – but Cep’s beautifully written offering goes a long way to making up for that. Utterly gripping, this is the ideal Christmas treat for anyone who loves Harper Lee.
—— Claire Lowdon , Sunday Times, Best Literary Books of the YearAn ingeniously structured, beautifully written double mystery
—— The EconomistFascinating true story
—— The TimesThe astonishing account of murders in Alabama and Harper Lee's attempt to unravel the story.
—— Hugo Vickers , The TelegraphFascinating ... Riveting.
—— Evening StandardA fantastical narrative that involves rampaging pirates, ghost women and princesses...Bold
—— Andrea Martin , HeatThis gripping and evocative novel questions the nature of the stories we tell ourselves and others
—— UK Press SyndicationA rollicking fantastical narrative
—— iA wild adventure...full of splendid incident... There is much to enjoy in this novel -- the liveliness of Haddon's imagination and the virtuosity of his style
—— Allan Massie , The Scotsman[The Porpoise] achieve[s] the truly Shakespearean feat of simultaneously conveying disgust at the darkest aspects of human behaviour and relishing them, making the reader feel horribly – and deliciously – complicit
—— Jake Kerridge , Sunday ExpressStamped with the same bold and original imagination… Haddon’s mash-up of myth and history may have a fantastical feel, but once the reader has adjusted to his exuberant originality they will find prose on every page that is pure joy
—— Jane Thynne , Tablet, *Novel of the Week*Haddon writes with wrenching beauty about how the world inflicts itself on the disadvantaged... It's a testament to Haddon's prodigious gifts as a storyteller that this strange, epic adventure is so compulsively readable
—— Nicholas Mancusi , Time MagazineA strange, tangled web of a story, drawing on ancient mythology and expanding into time travel… this innovative novel offers escapes into multiple worlds
—— Culture WhisperIrresistible storytelling that slides between the present day and a mythic realm… A heady delight
—— Guardian, *Summer Reads of 2019*The novel draws on Shakespeare and Greek legend, and is the sort of mile-a-minute adventure you can get lost in for hours without realising
—— ShortList, *Summer Reads of 2019*[The Porpoise] confirms the sense of a gifted writer letting his talent off the leash at last… Mind-bending yet marvellously readable, it stakes Haddon’s claim to be one of the best writers in Britain right now
—— Daily Mail, *Summer reads of 2019*Haddon conveys all this with startling granularity: the stinking, seething Jacobean London traversed by the ghosts of Wilkins and Shakespeare… Haddon's novel creates, throughout, a looming sense that something very bad but not quite perceptible is in the process of unfolding: a terrible half-glimpsed fate that the characters are powerless to resist
—— Adam Smyth , London Review of BooksThe Porpoise begins as a page-turning thriller and soon shifts into something slippery and strange – but remains propulsive throughout
—— New StatesmanMark Haddon’s best novel yet. The Porpoise begins as a propulsive thriller…and segues into a classical-world adventure that reinvents the story of Pericles in prose of a hallucinatory vividness
—— Justine Jordan , Guardian, *Books of the Year*The Porpoise reworks legend with the compelling force of a thriller
—— Lindsey Hilsum , Observer, *Books of the Year*[An] exquisite retelling of Shakespeare’s Pericles
—— Claire Allfree , Daily Mail, *Books of the Year*Thrilling, dramatic and exquisitely written, The Porpoise combines myth and reality to enthralling effect
—— Jane Shilling , Daily MailVuong…[is] a keen anthropologist of the contemporary American experience.
—— Jessica Loudis , Times Literary SupplementA beautiful novel full of raw feelings.
—— Laura Waddell , Scotsman[A] phosphorescent debut novel… Vuong layers past and present brilliantly in a shifting series of brief episodes and striking mood-musings from within the mind of his protagonist… the hyperreality of Little Dog’s self-awareness is always a delight.
—— Mark Hudson , TabletStaggering, sensual and poetic
—— Pandora Sykes[A] stunning debut… Ocean Vuong crafts lyrical, masterful prose in this emotionally-powerful piece of story telling. On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous is sure to stay with readers long after they have put the novel down.
—— Eastern Daily PressA brutally honest exploration of race, class, and masculinity.
—— Asian Art Newspaper, *Books of the Year*A tender exploration of violence, migration and language.
—— Justine Jordan , Guardian, *Books of the Year*This romantic, lusciously written debut lingers over kisses.
—— Robbie Millen and James Marriot , The Times, *Books of the Year*A magical synthesis of memoir, fiction and poetry.
—— Joyce Carol Oates , Times Literary Supplement, *Books of the Year*So very full of beauty and power. Also, grace.
—— Tommy Orange , Observer, *Books of the Year*On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong is a stunning, relentless work of pure passion and I was captivated from the go.
—— Úna-Minh Kavanagh , Sunday Independent *Books of the Year*A story that is deeply relatable, understandable and can find common currency with us all. He uses his differences to connect us, to show the links that bind us, to explore violence, masculinity, poverty and yearning… you’ll quickly get carried away by his undercurrents into spaces and places you’d perhaps never thought of exploring or even realised existed.
—— GsceneVuong’s gift lies in his ability to write with beautiful specificity while digging into the wounds of immigration, culture, queerness and memory. I’ve read many very good books in 2019 but none have obliterated me like On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous.
—— Katie Goh , Skinny, *Books of the Year*Ocean Vuong is a magician with words. When he writes, it's as if language itself is dancing. On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous is… a brutally honest exploration of race, class and masculinity. This debut novel is a luminous, mesmerising gift.
—— attitude, *Books of the Year*Astounding.
—— Malin Hay , UpcomingVuong jettisons the prose for poetic verse, with Roland Barthes, Duchamp’s Fountain and queer love all collapsing into splintering lines of verse. Vuong’s sentences are so beautiful, sometimes I would say them over and over again in my head, hoping I might be able to trap them in there.
—— Annie Lord , Independent[Vuong is] brilliant and so flexible with language and has such an understanding of what an emotion incarnate is, he is able to not condense it but to heighten it across languages, across countries, across codes as characters speak to one another. He's peerless.
—— Bryan Washington , Observer[A] triumphant debut novel... On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous felt like a true masterpiece being crafted before my eyes, and I was devastated to see the novel draw to a close. I truly can't recommend this book highly enough - I don't remember the last time I was so floored after reading something that I had to take the rest of the day off speaking to family... a passionate, eye-opening journey, and is most certainly one to be added to your lockdown reading list.
—— Rebecca Scott , Glasgow GuardianBeautifully written... Unlike anything I have read before
—— Ellie Down , ExeposéAn engrossing coming-of-age story.
—— Mariella Frostrup , Sunday Times[Vuong] is an author of incredible and magical talent, with many of his paragraphs reading like the most beautiful poetry... An absolute must-read
—— GlamourRaw, lyrical and at times hearth-wrenching, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous is a book of real beauty
—— iFor a long time after I read this, I could still feel the impact of his story. On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous is an experience that you need to have.
—— DIVAI read the novel On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong while on tour and the language often stopped me in my tracks... powerful.
—— Dua Lipa , Guardian, *Summer Reads of 2023*Inventive... [On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous] just stops you as a reader to marvel at the beautifully constructed narrative
—— Art Newspaper