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This is the first novel by the award-winning, bestselling author George Saunders - a true literary eventTenth of December was a New York Times bestseller, and included in their 10 Best Books of the Year list. It sold over 400,000 copies worldwide, with 12,000 coming from UK markets.George Saunders is one of the most lauded and respected US writers, and has been included in Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People in the World, the New York Times 10 Best Books of the Year list.To be accompanied by an extensive marketing and publicity campaign.George Saunders is the author of nine books, including Lincoln in the Bardo, winner of the 2017 Man Booker Prize. Tenth of December was a finalist for the National Book Award and won the inaugural Folio Prize. He has received MacArthur and Guggenheim fellowships and the PEN/Malamud Prize for excellence in the short story, and was recently elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2013, he was named one of the world's 100 most influential people by Time magazine. He teaches in the creative writing program at Syracuse University.
georgesaundersbooks.comWINNER OF THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE 2017
A STORY OF LOVE AFTER DEATH
'A masterpiece' Zadie Smith
'Extraordinary' Daily Mail
'Breathtaking' Observer
'A tour de force' The Sunday Times
The extraordinary first novel by the bestselling, Folio Prize-winning, National Book Award-shortlisted George Saunders, about Abraham Lincoln and the death of his eleven year old son, Willie, at the dawn of the Civil War
The American Civil War rages while President Lincoln's beloved eleven-year-old son lies gravely ill. In a matter of days, Willie dies and is laid to rest in a Georgetown cemetery. Newspapers report that a grief-stricken Lincoln returns to the crypt several times alone to hold his boy's body.
From this seed of historical truth, George Saunders spins an unforgettable story of familial love and loss that breaks free of realism, entering a thrilling, supernatural domain both hilarious and terrifying. Willie Lincoln finds himself trapped in a transitional realm - called, in Tibetan tradition, the bardo - and as ghosts mingle, squabble, gripe and commiserate, and stony tendrils creep towards the boy, a monumental struggle erupts over young Willie's soul.
Unfolding over a single night, Lincoln in the Bardo is written with George Saunders' inimitable humour, pathos and grace. Here he invents an exhilarating new form, and is confirmed as one of the most important and influential writers of his generation. Deploying a theatrical, kaleidoscopic panoply of voices - living and dead, historical and fictional - Lincoln in the Bardo poses a timeless question: how do we live and love when we know that everything we hold dear must end?WINNER OF THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE 2017George Saunders's brilliant debut novel about a grieving Lincoln confirms him as a literary star . To read Saunders's fiction is to be dazzled by ingenuity, imagination and searing comic verve ... A tender but trenchant reminder that America is and always has been many-voiced: not one story, but millionsDeath haunts us, and in Lincoln in the Bardo George Saunders mines the many ways it does: the Gothic, the sentimental, the fearful and, above all, the grief-strickenI was impressed but challenged by the originality and scope of George Saunders's Booker-winning story of grief and empathy, Lincoln in the BardoA luminous feat of generosity and humanism. Such is Saunders's magnificent portraiture that readers will recognize in this wretchedness and bravery aspects of their own characters as wellThe most strange and brilliant book you'll read this year . Riotously imagined ... So intimate and human, so profound, that it seems like an act of graceA historical novel that hews deeply and movingly to archival fact while also being an all-out crazy spectacle of his own invention ... A puzzling, hilarious vortex of invention that only Saunders could pull off. The novel made me feel intimate with Lincoln, and that particular moment of history, in a way I never had beforeIngenious ... As entrancing as it is beautifulDazzling and disorientating . As you turn the pages of this remarkable novel it starts to feel uncannily like a hinge in American historyLincoln in the Bardo was every bit as wonderful as I expected from the great George SaundersIt would be an understatement to call this novel an extraordinary tour de force ... Steeped in morality, it's a master-feat of vitalityCould hardly be more of a phenomenal tour de force ... Encompassing macabre fantasy and aching emotion, this brilliantly imaginative excursion into a post-mortem world hauntingly celebrates the pleasures and the privilege of lifeA breathtakingly agile narrative . A brilliant, exhausting, emotionally involving attempt to get up again, to fight for empathy, kindness and self-sacrifice, and to resistThe book is as weird as it sounds, but it's also pretty darn goodA surreal metaphysical drama about grief and freedom ... A father-son narrative that is both hilarious and hauntingI was so pleased that George Saunders won the Booker for Lincoln in the Bardo. He's like literary psilocybin, scaring the bejesus out of you before revealing the world anewSaunders's extraordinary verbal energy is harnessed, for the most part, in the service of capturing the pathos of everyday life . It is Saunders's beautifully realized portrait of Lincoln - caught at this hinge moment in time, in his own personal bardo, as it were - that powers this bookI can't choose Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders: everyone will, right? Still, it's utterly astonishingA masterpiece'The Man Booker Prize judges got it right in choosing George Saunders's Lincoln in the Bardo ... A polyphonic masterpiece, by turns hilarious and deeply poignantAn incredible work of art. Deeply moral, heartfelt, hilarious, and wildly imaginativeA strange and haunting novel - his highly anticipated first, after decades of short-story wizardry - about the effect the dead have on the living, and the living on the deadThe story canters along ... The writing constantly surprisesLincoln in the Bardo has great matters on its mind: freedom and slavery, the spirit and the body. But it is, finally, "about" Abraham Lincoln, that great spectral presence in a whole subgenre of American fictionMust be one of my favourite novels. What a warm, kindhearted and radical piece of writing. Such delicacy, such serious wit. I love itThis is a book that confounds our expectations of what a novel should look and sound likeThe much anticipated long-form debut from the US short-story maestro does not dissapointAn original father-son tale that expertly blends history and fiction (and even the supernatural), Lincoln in the Bardo explores grief, loss, life, deathA historical novel like no other - a supernatural ensemble extravaganza of awesome intricacy and somewhat perplexing purpose ... A feat of style ... A polyphonic spree that spins the headGeorge Saunders makes you feel as though you are reading fiction for the first timeA cacophonous, genre-busting book inspired by the death of Abraham Lincoln's young sonA morally passionate, serious writer ... He will be read long after these times have passedHe makes the all-but-impossible look effortless. We're lucky to have himAn astoundingly tuned voice - graceful, dark, authentic and funnySaunders is a writer of arresting brilliance and originality, with a sure sense of his material and apparently inexhaustible resources of voice ... Scary, hilarious and unforgettableThere is no one better, no one more essentialFew people cut as hard or deep as Saunders doesSaunders is a true original - restlessly inventive, yet deeply humaneReading George Saunders is, it's safe to say, like no other literary experienceNo one writes more powerfully than George Saunders about the lost, the unlucky, the disenfranchisedFunny, poignant - in flashes, deeply moving - light as a feather and consistently weirdThere is really no one like him. He is an original - but everyone knows thatSwings from hilarious to crushing and back again with astonishing dexterity . An exceptional novel . Believe the hypeStrange, profound, melancholy . In the final of Lincoln of the Bardo, the realities of death and loss are faced head-on ... Historical fiction will never be the sameThe author may have set out to write his first novel, but the work he completed is a genre unto itselfAn unsentimental novel of Shakespearean proportions, gorgeously stuffed with tragic characters, bawdy humor, terrifying visions, throat-catching tenderness, and a galloping narrativeOne of the strangest books of mainstream fiction around, competing only with some of Saunders's own story collection for unbridled inventivenessA matterlightblooming phenomenon. Loud and big. Exploding with grief and, more so, hope. And better left undescribed until you yourself reach the endIt's only February but this will undoubtedly be considered one of the best books of 2017Wonderfully bizarre and hilariously terrifying examination of the ability to live and loveMoving and inventive tour de forceFiction taken to a new realm, and a work of sheer brillianceThis astounding novel pitches you into the strangest of places ... BrilliantDevastatingly movingAlong with the wonderfully bizarre, empathy abounds in LincolnA strange, wise novel, truer in its expression than many ostensibly historical novelsTremendously moving ... Surpasses all expectations. This is a masterpieceAn urgently political, profoundly moral book, albeit one so playful and so fantastical that the reader may hardly noticeA joyous, comically macabre exploration of love, death and loss ... Bursting with lifeSaunders is defined by a crackling, electric kind of empathy; by the kind of humbling understanding that simply comes from trying to look further, understand more, know deeperA hands-down masterpiece - the subject of Abraham Lincoln and the genius of this author is a perfect union . I wept while reading this book. It is singular - I've never read anything quite like itI literally couldn't put it down . Hilarious to poignant to really movingSurprising, daring, emotionally wrenching and warm-heartedFact and fiction mingle in this affecting portrait of a grieving presidentBest known for his critically acclaimed short stories, this is Saunders' first full-length novel, told with tenderness, imagination and witIt's like a gothic, American Under Milk WoodFilled with wit and sadness . It is an immensely powerful work. In the hands of the right imagination, the horror of individual loss can become an extraordinarily humane exploration of the beauty and the value of life, however painfulI met the amazing George Saunders at a recent festival and can't wait to read Lincoln in the BardoGeorge Saunders's Lincoln in the Bardo is an extraordinary act of poignant literary virtuosity about love, death, ghosts and history, starring the grieving presidentI was won over by the sheer brio, writerly flourish and humanity of Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders, which imagines a disputatious convocation of the dead observing the US president as he mourns his sonFrom his short stories, we might have expected Saunders's long-awaited first novel to be some sprawling vision of a future America. In fact, it's a historical novel - albeit one like no other . It's an admirable feat of styleI'll be working my way on backwards through George Saunders, having been hooked conclusively by Lincoln in the Bardo, tonal whimsies and all. I'm presently on Tenth of December, but I expect to have reached The Brief and Frightening Reign of Phil by the time we go on holidayIt revolves around the ghost of Abraham Lincoln's son, who died aged 11, and his fellows in the graveyard. There's no single narrator, but hundreds of different voices insteadUnfolding in the graveyard over a single night, narrated by a dazzling chorus of voices, Lincoln in the Bardo is a thrilling exploration of death, grief and the deeper meaning and possibilities of lifeHuge excitement greeted this debut novel from the US short-story master. Abraham Lincoln mourns his dead son, while other spirits in the cemetery, hovering between life and deathPicture a less fiery Purgatory with quirky ghost from Edward Gorey materializing in the official video of Michael Jackson's Thriller and you get a flavour of this darkly comic metaphysical tale . Saunders combines the larky and the macabre to wondrous effect . Skilful juxtaposition of multiple viewpoints creates both knockabout humour and deep anguish . Gloriously bonkersIt's impossible to read Lincoln in the Bardo and not think of America's current convulsions, of the impossibility of reconciling personal and public duty, of the harrowing, hollowing nature of irreversible lossFantastical, funny and deeply affecting ... At a time when America is divided, the book drills down to its early rupture . Saunders' project has always been one of radical empathy: to forge connections through the most unlikely means and in the most unpromising contexts. In this book there is warmth mixed into the weirdness; moral force behind the grotesquerie; and wild humour amid the tragedy. One can safely say there's never been a novel like itIn all his work, Saunders displays a knack for rendering abstract concepts with a specificity that seems both fantastical and familiar. No matter how strange the world of his fiction, at its heart is always something sentimentally recognisable . He lets you see the small moments of transition that a heart needs to keep belief alive. At its heart, Lincoln in the Bardo is an exploration of empathyOne of the year's most original and electrifying novelsFew things live up to their hype, but the first novel by American short-story writer George Saunders, which won the Booker Prize, is a rare work of modern genius. Innovative, compelling, moving and amusing, his story of squabbling spirits in the cemetery where Abraham Lincoln has just laid to rest his young son captures the human condition in a way only the greatest novelists can. Yes, it's that goodThe renowned short-story writer combined various forms from historical letters, to footnotes to comic dialogue, into a moving - if not entirely cohesive - story about loss, grief and our unwillingness to let goYou've never read anything like it. George Saunders takes risks. The risks he takes are always playful and wise ... The way he does things is almost spiritual, which is interesting - you don't see that much these daysA haunting tour de force ... At once funny, heart-breaking and utterly originalTo nominate standout books I only had to think for a nanosecond: with Lincoln in the Bardo George Saunders takes the novel by the scruff of its neck, shakes loose then reassembles every single component: voice, structure, plot, characterisation, even layout. It's a brilliant and awe-inspiring performance, blackly comic, deeply moving, unforgettable
Product Details
Title: | Lincoln in the Bardo |
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Author: | George Saunders |
SKU: | BK0430547 |
EAN: | 9781408871751 |
About Author
George Saunders is the author of ten books, most recently the essay collection A Swim in a Pond in the Rain. His debut novel Lincoln in the Bardo won the 2017 Man Booker Prize and the Premio Rezzori prize. His collection Tenth of December was a finalist for the National Book Award and won the inaugural Folio Prize. He has received MacArthur and Guggenheim fellowships and the PEN/Malamud Prize for excellence in the short story, and was recently elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2013, he was named one of the world's 100 most influential people by Time magazine. He teaches in the creative writing program at Syracuse University.
georgesaundersbooks.com