Showing posts with label Allan Hollinghurst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allan Hollinghurst. Show all posts

Thursday, August 21, 2025

Sally Rooney to Percival Everett / The 24 best books of 2024 27 December 2024 Rebecca Laurence and Lindsay Baker

 


Simon & Schuster/ Faber/ Doubleday Book covers of: The Safekeep, Intermezzo and James (Credit: Simon & Schuster/ Faber/ Doubleday)Simon & Schuster/ Faber/ Doubleday

From an intense tale of two brothers to a stunning Booker winner – the very best fiction of the year.


Sally Rooney to Percival Everett: The 24 best books of 2024

Rebecca Laurence and Lindsay Baker

Intermezzo by Sally Rooney

Launched late in the year to the feverish fan hoards was the fourth instalment in the so-called "Rooneyverse". In a slight departure from the norm, Intermezzo's protagonists are two men: Peter, 32, a talented but troubled barrister, and his 22-year-old chess-prodigy brother, Ivan, both working through grief and family tensions following their father's recent death. Elsewhere, however, there were plenty of Rooney's familiar beats to be enjoyed – tangled relationships, frequent sex, philosophical debates and deceptively simple but assured prose. "Intermezzo is perfect – truly wonderful" writes The Observer, "a tender, funny page-turner about the derangements of grief, and Rooney's richest treatment yet of messy romantic entanglements." Its review concludes by asking: "Is there a better novelist at work right now?" While The New York Times' critic was enchanted, writing: "Intermezzo is Sally Rooney with a bit more butter and cream. Yes, please, waiter. Call me a fool for love, but this oft-jaundiced reader found this meal to be discerning, fattening, old-school and delicious." (RL)

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

The best fiction of 2024



Review

The best fiction of 2024

This article is more than 1 month old

From Sally Rooney’s Intermezzo to Alan Hollinghurst’s Our Evenings, Percival Everett’s James and a host of inventive debuts – this year’s highlights in fiction

Justine Jordan

Saturday 7 December 2024


In a year of surprises – a posthumous fable from Gabriel García Márquez, a superhero collaboration between China Miéville and Keanu Reeves – the biggest news, as ever, was a new Sally Rooney novel. Intermezzo (Faber) landed in September: the story of two brothers mourning their father and negotiating relationships with each other and the women in their lives, it is a heartfelt examination of love, sex and grief. With one strand exploring the neurodiverse younger brother’s perspective, and a conflicted stream-of-consciousness for the older, it opens up a more fertile direction after 2021’s Beautiful World, Where Are You.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Books of the year 2011 by Julian Barnes

 

Julian Barnes


Books of the year 2011 

by Julian Barnes









Julian Barnes
Friday 25 November 2015


Is there a better short story writer in the world than Alice Munro? In her New Selected Stories (Chatto & Windus) she gives the long story the meatiness of a novel, and moves through time with an ease few can match. 


The Wine of Solitude (Chatto & Windus) continues our rediscovery (in Sandra Smith's fine translations) of Irène Némirovsky's work: it's an unerring portrait of a neglected, baleful and punitive daughter. 

Among homegrown fiction, I most admired Edward St Aubyn's At Last (Picador), and Alan Hollinghurst's The Stranger's Child (Picador) – the most originally and brilliantly structured novel I've read in a long time.


 Compiled by Ginny Hooker.

THE GUARDIAN