Gunesekera's lush descriptions make you see and smell the island and feel its hot, damp air on your skin
Spectator
A terrific read: pacy, political, moral, atmospheric and yes, definitely romantic ...The film is waiting to be made. It's all there: an inverted but murky Pride and Prejudice, paradise spoilt, ill-fated lovers, rascals, imperial wickedness, the cunning of natives, plots and melees and a host of fabulous flowers ... Exquisite prose awakens all the senses
- Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, Independent
Gunesekera is strikingly adept at delineating the landscape of rootlessness ... [He] has a gentle, generous, deceptively light touch
Sunday Times
Gunesekera's mellifluous prose alone is worth the price of admission. His description here of a first kiss has surely never been bettered
Daily Mail
Gunesekera's storytelling is languorous, atmospheric, imagistic
Guardian
Seriously and movingly, <i>The Prisoner of Paradise</i> contains a very modern message: a plea for the book. It has as much to say about writing as it has about love and colonial misery ... Here are the genuine answers, colourful, arresting, fresh and enormous as any opera
- Todd McEwan, Glasgow Herald
In this blisteringly lucid novel, it's as if Jane Austen, John Keats, Charles Dickens and even William Burroughs have clubbed together to render a masterful double-take on the 19th century's own ideas of romance and empire, rendered in a colossally skilful, flexible hybrid of the best of English prose and prosody
Herald Scotland
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Romesh Gunesekera is the author of four novels: Reef, which was shortlisted for both the Booker Prize and the Guardian Fiction Prize, The Sandglass, winner of the inaugural BBC Asia Award, Heaven's Edge, shortlisted for a Commonwealth Writers Prize and a New York Times Notable Book, and The Match. He has also written two collections of short stories: his acclaimed debut Monkfish Moon and a bilingual limited edition book O Colleccionador de Especiarias. He grew up in Sri Lanka and the Philippines and now lives in North London. He first visited Mauritius in 1998 where he discovered the beginnings of this novel.
@RomeshG