These Darkening Days
Autor Benjamin Myersen Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 sep 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781526650306
ISBN-10: 1526650304
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.26 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1526650304
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.26 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Myers' novel The Gallows Pole has been adapted by Shane Meadows for a BBC series, produced by A24 with Element Pictures (the team behind Normal People and The Favourite). His novel The Offing has been adapted for stage and is also being developed for film by Helena Bonham-Carter
Notă biografică
Benjamin Myers was born in Durham in 1976. His most recent novel, The Offing, was an international bestseller and selected for the Radio 2 Book Club. Other works include The Gallows Pole, which won the Walter Scott Prize for historical fiction, Beastings which was awarded the Portico Prize for Literature, and Pig Iron which won the inaugural Gordon Burn Prize. He has also published non-fiction, poetry and crime novels and his journalism has appeared in publications including the Guardian, New Statesman, Spectator, Caught By The River and many more. He lives in the Upper Calder Valley, West Yorkshire.benmyers.com / @BenMyers1
Recenzii
As good as anything being written in Britain today
Layers of landscape, myth and the hidden underbelly of everyday life outside of the metropolis are built up as the plot unfolds and the darkness grows. By now you should all know how good a writer Myers is. If you don't, These Darkening Days will be more than enough to convince you
A powerful novel by a writer who has found his subject and the voice that best expresses it . He could be Yorkshire's Iain Sinclair as well as its Cormac McCarthy
Subtle and compelling, controlled and atmospheric - perfect, in fact, for the long dark nights ahead
He's James Ellroy with a flat cap and a terrier
The collective blood pressure of the Yorkshire tourist board must ratchet up several notches every time that Myers publishes a new novel, but for the rest of us this is gripping stuff
Everything here, from the now-familiar landscapes to the description of life at the local newspaper and the behaviour of parachuted-in Sun reporters, is note perfect.But the book goes much further, delving into society's hysterical narcissism and the way its tendrils snake all the way back into myth, legend and half-forgotten community history. There's no question that this is a superb piece of work..a fantastic eye for landscape and great political and cultural insight.it's funny, brutal and properly thrilling
The writing is stunning, from the occasional sentence which catches you and brings you up short - The streetlights wear soft halos in the mist - through to the ability to evoke the grittiness of this northern town in a few words. Sometimes I found myself going back and rereading sections, just for the pleasure the words gave. In places it's almost poetic. And it's all brilliant
Layers of landscape, myth and the hidden underbelly of everyday life outside of the metropolis are built up as the plot unfolds and the darkness grows. By now you should all know how good a writer Myers is. If you don't, These Darkening Days will be more than enough to convince you
A powerful novel by a writer who has found his subject and the voice that best expresses it . He could be Yorkshire's Iain Sinclair as well as its Cormac McCarthy
Subtle and compelling, controlled and atmospheric - perfect, in fact, for the long dark nights ahead
He's James Ellroy with a flat cap and a terrier
The collective blood pressure of the Yorkshire tourist board must ratchet up several notches every time that Myers publishes a new novel, but for the rest of us this is gripping stuff
Everything here, from the now-familiar landscapes to the description of life at the local newspaper and the behaviour of parachuted-in Sun reporters, is note perfect.But the book goes much further, delving into society's hysterical narcissism and the way its tendrils snake all the way back into myth, legend and half-forgotten community history. There's no question that this is a superb piece of work..a fantastic eye for landscape and great political and cultural insight.it's funny, brutal and properly thrilling
The writing is stunning, from the occasional sentence which catches you and brings you up short - The streetlights wear soft halos in the mist - through to the ability to evoke the grittiness of this northern town in a few words. Sometimes I found myself going back and rereading sections, just for the pleasure the words gave. In places it's almost poetic. And it's all brilliant