Author:Anita Desai
Eric is an uncertain, awkward young man, a would-be writer, and a traveller in spite of himself. Happy to follow his more confident girlfriend to Mexico, he is overwhelmed with sensory overload, but gradually seduced - by the strangeness, the colour, the mysteries of an older world. He finds himself on a curious quest for his own family in a 'ghost' mining town, now barely inhabited, where almost a hundred years earlier young Cornish miners worked the rich seams in the earth. On the Día de los Muertos, the feast day when the locals celebrate and remember their dead, the various strands of the novel come together hauntingly, bringing together past and present in a moment of quiet, powerful epiphany.
'dense with evocative imagery'
—— The GuardianCasts a gleefully amoral eye at the world around him... You couldn't, as the man says, make it up
—— Sean O'Hagan , ObserverComically rueful and tragically bloodshot
—— The TimesAn immensely skilful writer. He has a sober, searching intelligence and he examines Hollywood and the prairie states with an unflinching candour and a rare strain of melancholy
—— Daily TelegraphLike a noxious Douglas Coupland, Palahniuk charts new-felt and totally contemporary categories of despair
—— Ali Smith , GuardianDizzying . . . subtle and profound . . . And The Land Lay Still reads like an alternative history of Scotland told by its everyday people instead of its movers and shakers . . . eminently readable
—— Independent on SundayBoth epic and domestic, it delivers a wonderful lifelikeness
—— ScotsmanA hugely ambitious and compassionate novel . . . a jam-packed, dizzying piece of fiction . . . already it's being spoken of as the most important novel about Scotland since Lanark
—— Scotland on Sunday