You don't even need to make a list to see that <b>Peter Terrin is one of the handful of truly interesting authors writing in Dutch.</b> * NRC Handelsblad. *<br />A flawless novel . . . <b><i>Monte Carlo</i> is a small masterpiece.</b> * De Tijd. *<br /><b>Terrin raises the bar of Flemish literature slightly higher still</b> with this jewel that glitters like a freshly cut diamond. <b>Astonishingly perfect.</b> * Knack. *

It is the Monaco Grand Prix in May 1968. Jack Preston, a mechanic for Team Sutton, is making the final checks on his car as the beau monde mingles with the drivers under the eyes of the world's press and the galleries of spectators. DeeDee, a starlet of great beauty, seems to be walking towards him, or perhaps towards the royal box. Without warning a fireball rips across the starting grid. Preston will always bear the scars as a consequence of his unthinking heroism, his saving the life and the beauty of the girl, but details of the accident remain vague - no photographs capturing the moment have come to light.Weeks later, Preston emerges from hospital and goes home to his wife in a remote English village from which the drab atmosphere of the 1950s has yet to recede. There, as he slowly recovers, he awaits word from his employers and some sign of DeeDee's gratitude, an acknowledgment that it was he who saved her life.This is an unsettlingly beautiful story of obsession by an acknowledged master of classical restraint.Translated from the Dutch by David Doherty
Les mer
Monaco, May 1968 - a fireball explosion on the F1 track begins an unsettlingly beautiful tale of obsession and redemption

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780857054395
Publisert
2018-02-08
Utgiver
Vendor
MacLehose Press
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
126 mm
Aldersnivå
01, G
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
176

Forfatter
Oversetter

Biographical note

Peter Terrin (1968) is building a remarkably consistent oeuvre, which has already earned him comparisons with such writers as Franz Kafka and Albert Camus. The Guard (MacLehose Press, 2012) won him the European Union Literature Prize, and for Post Mortem (MacLehose Press, 2015) he was awarded the prestigious A.K.O. Literature Prize. His work has been translated into numerous languages.