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ONE OF THIS WEEK'S BEST NOVELS OF 2022 The perfect novel for fans
of The Last Dance, Hoop Dreams and Winning Time 'Exquisite. . .
Warm, humane, and tragic.' JONATHAN LETHEM At his high school
basketball try-outs, nerdy sports-obsessed Brian Blum meets new kid
Marcus Hayes. As a sportswriter, Brian spends the following twenty
years tracking his friends' superstar NBA career. But when Marcus
mounts his last dance comeback, after a couple of years out of the
game, both men must face the tensions of their unlikely dynamic,
and the disappointments of getting older. Praise for The Sidekick:
'There is something so compelling about the questions of whether
these two friends, despite their fraught history and hefty egos,
will rekindle a genuine connection . . . you'll want to know how
the game turns out.' TLS 'Compelling and emotionally resonant.'
Spectator 'Contemporary fiction's best kept secret . . . It's
gratifying to observe someone with a large amount of specific
knowledge not only imparting that expertise, but unlocking some
deeper meaning within it, like a top sports star working their
magic.' Sunday Business Post
Nineteen-year -old Annabella Milbanke, visiting London for the
swirl of parties and engagements of the season, is introduced to
Byron at a waltz. He has just published Childe Harold, and is
surrounded by a crowd of admirers, one of whom is his half-sister
Augusta Leigh. Annabella and Byron fall in love, but Augusta's
unwelcome presence in their relationship becomes increasingly
unbearable. Caught up in a potentially scandalous love triangle,
Annabella must decide whether following her heart is the most
dangerous thing she has ever done . . .
In Fall we see the tentative beginnings of an unlikely romance -
between schoolteacher Amy and drifting former graduate, Charles. In
Winter we hear how her colleague Howard learns, seventeen years too
late, that he has a daughter following a brief fling with
collegemate Annie. Spring and Summer tell the story of his
daughter's friend Rachel's relationships with her literature
teacher, Stuart, and her dying father Reuben. Executed with
exquisite sympathy, tenderness and emotional nuance, Either Side of
Winter is a moving and elegiac picture of people whose lives are
inextricably linked by circumstance, community - and a need to be
loved.
Paul is a mid-ranking tennis professional on the ATP tour. His
girlfriend Dana is an ex-model and photographer, and together with
their two-year-old son they form a tableau of the contented
upper-middle-class New York family. But Paul's parents and siblings
have come to stay in the build-up to the US Open, and with summer
storms brewing, several generations of domestic tension are brought
to boiling point . . .
When the narrator of Childish Loves inherits a colleague Peter's
writings on Lord Byron, he finds himself acting as a literary
sleuth. Sorting through boxes of manuscripts he reads between the
lines of these scandalous, Byron-inspired stories, meets with the
Society for the Publication of the Dead, and tracks down people
from Peter's past in an effort to untangle rumour from reality. In
the process, he crafts a masterful story-within-a-story that turns
on uncomfortable questions about childhood and sexual awakening,
innocence and attraction, while exploring the lives of three very
different writers and their brushes with success and failure in
both literature and life.
Three years after Lord Byron dismissed him from his service, Dr
John Polidori has fallen on hard times. And then a young woman
mistakes the doctor for the poet. As the pair fall in love,
Polidori knows that he can only emerge from Byron's shadow if he
confesses his true identity to the deluded girl; but was it only
Byron's shadow that led her to love him in the first place? And a
ghost story, The Vampyre, is published under Byron's name, but will
the truth of the matter be uncovered?
A SUNDAY TIMES TOP 100 NOVEL OF THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY Ten years
out of Yale and drifting through a teaching career, Greg Marnier
heads for his college reunion, jetlagged and drunk. There he bumps
into an old friend, Robert James, now wealthy and influential from
dotcom success. He has a plan: to buy up several abandoned
neighbourhoods in Detroit and build a new America from their ruins.
For a small investment, Greg can turn himself into a
twentieth-century pioneer. But for every urban misfit who's come
for a fresh start, there's a native Detroiter whose patch is being
swallowed up by these new young colonials. Soon, the realities of
life on America's urban frontier become all too apparent . . .
Reality versus fiction is at the heart of the current literary
debate. We live in a world of docu-drama, the 'real life' story.
Works of art, novels, films, are frequently bolstered by reference
to the autobiography of the creator, or to underlying 'fact.' Where
does that leave the imagination? And who gets to define the
parameters of 'reality' and 'fiction' anyway? Five writers debate
the limits of materialism and realism, in art and literature - and
offer a passionate defence of the alchemical imagination in a
fact-based world.
Douglas Pitt is a man obsessed. Laughed at, mocked and dismissed at
every turn, Pitt has spent the best part of an unremarkable
academic career attempting to prove the genius of Samuel Highgate
Syme (b 1794, Baltimore; soldier, geologist, inventor). After years
of frustration, Pitt finally stumbles into the good fortune he
hopes will make his name: he uncovers a manuscript written by a
fledgling scientist which recounts a year in the company of the
irrespresible Syme. Teeming with comic detail and fierce
intelligence, The Syme Papers recreates a time when to question the
world and the origin of creation was the greatest project a
scientist could undertake. It is a novel of genius and failure; of
a man who thought he could prove the world was hollow, and in the
glorious process of discover, broke his own heart.
ONE OF THIS WEEK'S BEST NOVELS OF 2022 The perfect novel for fans
of The Last Dance, Hoop Dreams and Winning Time 'Warm, humane, and
tragic ... Somewhere in a golden triangle between Frederick Exley's
A Fan's Notes, Richard Ford's The Sportswriter, and David Shields'
Black Planet.' JONATHAN LETHEM What seperates greatness from
ordinary life? At his high school basketball try-outs, nerdy
sports-obsessed Brian Blum meets new kid Marcus Hayes. What neither
of them knows when they line up at the end of practice to shoot
free throws is that Marcus will soon be living with the Blums,
following his parents' messy break-up, and that he will go on to
become an NBA star, the next Michael Jordan. As sportswriter Brian
spends the following twenty years tracking his friends' career, he
remains Marcus' only link to his pre-fame life. And, as Marcus
mounts his comeback after a couple of years out of the game, both
men must face the tensions and disappointments of getting older.
The Sidekick is the story of a friendship, of two lives bound
together but fundamentally different, and of what it's like to live
your life in the shadow of greatness.
Fresh out of college and uncertain how to proceed with life, the
narrator of Ben Markovits' Playing Days finds himself drifting
towards a career that once obsessed his father - professional
basketball. Gaining a place on a minor league German team, he
leaves Texas and lands in the small rather desolate town of
Landshut, playing basketball with an eclectic group of teammates,
training for most of the day and then trying to find ways to fill
the rest of it. It's an odd, isolated existence, punctuated by the
intense excitement - and often intense disappointment - of the
game. But then he meets Anke, a young single mother who happens to
be the former wife of one of his teammates; and their tentative,
burgeoning relationship becomes as significant and as life changing
as the game itself. Beautifully written, Playing Days is entirely
recognisable in its depiction of the first long summer after
university. Tinged with the melancholy and nostalgia of early steps
into adulthood, it's the story of a young man's first experience of
adult love, and of the discovery of his own limitations.
When his former colleague Peter Sullivan dies, Ben Markovits
inherits unpublished manuscripts about the life of Lord Byron
including the novels Imposture and A Quiet Adjustment. Ben s own
literary career is in the doldrums, and he tries to revive it by
publishing and writing about his dead friend, whose reimagining of
Byron s lost memoirs titled Childish Loves may provide a key to
Sullivan s own life and tarnished reputation. Acting as a literary
sleuth, Ben sorts through boxes of Sullivan s writing; reads
between the lines of his scandalous, Byron- inspired stories; meets
with the Society for the Publication of the Dead; and tracks down
people from Peter s past in an effort to untangle rumor from
reality. In the process, he crafts a masterful story-within-a-story
that turns on uncomfortable questions about childhood and sexual
awakening, innocence and attraction, while exploring the lives of
three very different writers and their brushes with success and
failure in both literature and life."
In his Byron trilogy, Benjamin Markovits lovingly reinvents the
nineteenth-century novel, true to its perfect prose, penetrating
insight, and simmering passions. Inspired by the actual biography
of Lord Byron the greatest literary figure and most notorious sex
symbol of his age Markovits re-imagines Byron s marriage to the
capable, intellectual, and tormented Annabella and the scandal that
broke open their lives and riveted the world around them: Byron s
incestuous relationship with his impetuous half-sister, Gus. Their
very different understandings of love and one s obligations to
society lead them all and the reader headlong to a devastating
conclusion."
Lord Byron was the greatest writer and most notorious, scandalous
lover of his age an irresistible attraction for a sheltered,
bookish, and passionate young woman like Eliza Esmond. Eliza
believes she's met Byron on the doorstep of his publisher, and that
her dreams have come true when he arranges to meet her in secret.
But what if the man she believes to be Byron is someone else a
look-alike named John Polidori, who once toured Europe as Byron's
doctor? And if Polidori is the true author of a wildly successful
book everyone believes to have been written by Byron, who is the
real imposter? Stylish, subtle, and seductive, "Imposture" is about
ambition, fantasy, the power of artistic greatness, and the
consequences of celebrity by a gifted novelist of true talent.
Reading group guide available."
'Intricately, intimately written, with some wonderful prose and
delicate dialogue.' Guardian 'A loving and nuanced portrait of a
family's myriad functions.' The New Yorker 'Utterly absorbing.'
Financial Times 'A tour de force.' Sunday Times A Luminous family
saga from one of Granta's Best Young British Novelists When the
four Essinger children gather in Austin for Christmas, they all
bring their news. Nathan wants to become a federal judge. Susie's
husband has taken a job in England. Jean has asked her boyfriend
and (once-married) boss to meet her family. Paul has broken up with
Dana, mother of their son Cal. But their parents have plans, too,
and Liesel, the materfamilias, has invited Dana and Cal to stay,
hoping to bring them back together. As the week unfolds, each of
the Essingers has to confront the tensions and conflicts between
old families and new. Rich, intimate, and deeply perceptive,
Christmas in Austin beautifully explores the deep-rooted division
between the world we grow up in, and the life we make for
ourselves. 'A subtle, complex, grown-up study of a modern family.
There's something pleasurable and astute to be found on every
page.' Literary Review
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