<p>‘Subtly and deftly, Thompson succeeds in capturing the experience of city life … Thompson can make a sentence sing in a way that is uniquely his own … Turning the pages of COMMUNION TOWN you become aware that here is a new writer working out what he can do, and realising that he can do anything’ Telegraph</p>
<p>‘Ambitious, haunting and beautifully written … Thompson succeeds in making the familiar seem strange and wonderful’ Daily Mail</p>
<p>‘A book packed with powerful, memorable writing … Thompson’s engrossing, memorable debut is worthy of close, appreciative reading not just from Man Booker judges, but everyone’ Sunday Times</p>
<p>‘Thompson's ten interlinked tales, longlisted for the Man Booker this week, deconstruct genre and myth while remaining original and superbly unsettling’ Guardian</p>
<p>‘His writing is highly wrought and beautiful, with that sense of leisure and perfectionism one often finds hanging around the dreaming spires – he’s incredibly intelligent and assumes you are too. As the ten stories unfold you’re left with a vivid picture of an imaginary city with its own character’ The Times</p>
<p>‘This impressive debut captures a city’s shifting personality through ten stories. With unanswered questions and Gothic tinges, its kaleidoscopic approach blends into one bewitching picture’ Sunday Telegraph</p>
<p>‘Subtly linked tales … details are joyous’ Independent on Sunday</p>
<p>‘Wonderfully atmospheric and full of a subtle gothic horror that eats away like dry rot at the timbers of this city, Sam Thompson’s accomplished debut weaves many voice into a beguiling urban chorus’ TLS</p>
<p>‘The 19th century motif of the flaneur – basically a figure who experiences a city through the act of walking – is revived to creepily dreamy effect’ Metro</p>
<p>‘Dreamlike, gnarly and present, COMMUNION TOWN shifts like a city walker, from street to street’ China Miéville</p>
<p>‘COMMUNION TOWN is one of those rare creatures – a first novel that combines ambition with humanity. It is a strange, remarkable work’ Tash Aw</p>

The Man Booker longlisted Communion Town reveals the shadows and sinister inhabitants of a city that never appears the same way twice. On crowded streets, in the town squares and half-empty tower blocks, the lonely and lost try to make a connection. A weary gumshoe pounds the reeking sidewalks, seeking someone he knows he will never find. Violence loiters in blind alleys, eager to embrace the unsuspecting and the reckless. Lovers are doomed to follow treacherous paths that were laid long before they first met. This city is no ordinary place. Here, the underworld has surfaced; dreams melt into reality and memories are imagined before they are lived. Ghosts and monsters, refugees and travellers – the voices of Communion Town clamour to tell the stories of the city, stories that must be heard to be believed.
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The Man Booker longlisted Communion Town reveals the shadows and sinister inhabitants of a city that never appears the same way twice.
• Longlisted for the 2012 Man Booker prize. • Chosen as one of Amazon’s ‘Rising Stars’ • For fans of David Mitchell and Italo Calvino; a novel that achieves its effects through a symphony of different voices. • Sam Thompson teaches English Literature at St Anne’s College, Oxford, and regularly reviews for the TLS and LRB. • Five-star review in the Telegraph, and further positive reviews from the Daily Mail, Sunday Times, Guardian and Observer. • We are putting a lot of energy behind this extraordinary new voice, and the paperback will live up to the bar set by the beautiful, tactile hardback package. Competition: Stories Of Your Life And Others; Station Eleven; Obelisk; The Woman In White; Ulverton. Tash Aw;China Mieville; David Mitchell; Neil Gaiman; Ted Chiang; Emily St. John Mandel; Stephen Baxter;
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780007454778
Publisert
2013-01-31
Utgiver
Vendor
Fourth Estate Ltd
Vekt
200 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Dybde
18 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
288

Forfatter

Biographical note

Sam Thompson was born in 1978. He teaches English at St Anne's College, Oxford, and he writes for the Times Literary Supplement, the London Review of Books and the Guardian. He lives in Oxford with his wife and son.