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The North Water - by Ian McGuire (Hardcover)

 The North Water - by  Ian McGuire (Hardcover)
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Last Price: 27.00 USD

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<p>"<i>The North Water</i>, Ian McGuire's savage new novel about a 19th-century Arctic whaling expedition, is a great white shark of a book--swift, terrifying, relentless and unstoppable. [...] Mr. McGuire is such a natural storyteller--and recounts his tale here with such authority and verve--that 'The North Water' swiftly immerses the reader in a fully imagined world. [...] Mr. McGuire nimbly folds all these melodramatic developments into his story as it hurtles toward its conclusion. He has written an allusion-filled novel that still manages to feel original, a violent tale of struggle and survival in a cinematically beautiful landscape."<br>--<b>Michiko Kakutani, <i>The New York Times</i></b></p><p>"Riveting and darkly brilliant....<i>The North Water</i> feels like the result of an encounter between Joseph Conrad and Cormac McCarthy in some run-down port as they offer each other a long, sour nod of recognition." <br>--<b>Colm Toibin, </b><i><b>The New York Times Book Review</b></i></p><p>"[An] audacious work of historical suspense fiction...It's the poetic precision of McGuire's harsh vision of the past that makes his novel such a standout...absolutely transporting."<br><b>--Maureen Corrigan, NPR's <i>Fresh Air</i></b></p><p>"Mesmerizing . . . . Told in grisly language that calls to mind Cormac McCarthy, <i>The North Water </i>begs such ontological questions as: What profit it a man who saves his skin but misplaces his soul?"<br>--<b>Tom Nolan, <i>Wall Street Journal</i></b></p><p>"Bold and frightening, <i>The North Water</i> offers many satisfactions and little comfort. . . . Readers of Cormac McCarthy know that beautiful writing and bloody murder go together as well now as they did in Homer, and Ian McGuire proves it."<br>--<b>Jonathan Arac, <i>Pittsburgh Post-Gazette</i></b> </p><p>"Carries echoes of Melville and <i>Lord Jim . . . </i>engrossing . . . unsparing and utterly convincing."<br>--<b><i>Highbrow Magazine</i></b></p><p>"A dark, brilliant yarn....An amazing journey." <br>--<b><i>Publishers Weekly</i>, starred review</b></p><p>"McGuire delivers...moments of fine prose that recall Seamus Heaney's harsh music, as when an iceberg is described as 'an albinistic butte unmoored from the desert floor.'" <br><b>--<i>Kirkus Reviews</i></b></p><p> "Raw and compulsively readable . . . think <i>The Revenant </i>for the Arctic Circle." <br>--<b><i>The Millions</i></b> </p><p>"It's one of those ones that you want to wake up at 5.30 in the morning so you can read some more."<br>--<b>James Daunt, </b>founder of Daunt Books and managing director of Waterstones</p><p>"<i>The North Water</i> is a conspiracy thriller stuffed into the skin of a blood-and-guts whaling yarn... The novel is a stunning achievement, by turns great fun and shocking, thrilling and provocative. . . . Behold: one of the finest books of the year."<br>--<b><i>Independent </i> </b></p><p>"McGuire delivers one bravura set-piece after another....<i>The North Water </i>has, in places, a Conrad-Melville undercurrent, but for the most part it is Dickens's influence that is most keenly felt....This is a stunning novel, one that snares the reader from the outset and keeps the tightest grip until its bitter end." <br>--<b><i>Financial Times</i></b></p><p>"McGuire's prose is fresh and vivid and his novel as a whole is atmospheric and intellectually fecund. Its surface might be awash with blood; but beneath it flows a current of dark and transporting beauty."<br><b><i>--Spectator</i></b></p><p>"As a storyteller, McGuire has a sure and unwavering touch, and he has engineered a superbly compelling suspense narrative....As a stylist, too, McGuire is never less than assured. He has produced a fine addition to the maritime canon, but one that revivifies it with a thoroughly modern acuity of style. He has established himself, too, as a writer of exceptional craft and confidence..."<br><b><i>--Irish Times</i></b></p><p>"Compared with this savage tale of Arctic survival, Leonardo DiCaprio's bear-wrestling ordeal in <i>The Revenant</i> looks like something out of A. A. Milne....McGuire expertly arranges all this mayhem, and the narrative is horrifically gripping. <i>The North Water</i> is smoothly readable despite the horrors it depicts, and that's testament to the quality of McGuire's prose. Such fine writing might have been lifted from the pages of Herman Melville's <i>Moby-Dick</i>." <br>--<b><i>Independent</i> <i>on Sunday</i></b></p><p>"It is a vivid read, full of twists, turns, period detail and strong characters. The setting is original too, and the description of harpooning and flensing of a whale have been forever etched on my memory. This melodramatic blood and urine-stained tale is an enjoyable contrast to most literary fiction."<br>--<b><i>The Times</i></b></p><p>"Uncompromising in its language, relentless in the unfolding of its blood-soaked narrative, this is not a novel for the squeamish, but it has exceptional power and energy."<br>--<b><i>Sunday Times</i></b></p><p>"Terrific, seamed with pitch black humour and possessed of a momentum that's kept up to the final, unexpected but resoundingly satisfying scene....inspired."<br>--<b><i>Daily Mail</i></b></p><p>"The strength of <i>The North Water</i> lies in its well-researched detail and persuasive descriptions of the cold, violence, cruelty, and the raw, bloody business of whale-killing." <br>--<b><i>Guardian</i></b></p><p>"Beware: this book is quite a ride. The violence is ghastly, the queasy sense of moral decay all-pervasive. McGuire makes Quentin Tarantino look like Jane Austen....the language has a harsh, surprising beauty that contrasts the spectacular setting with the greedy bankrupt men who force their way northward, armed with harpoons for slaughter."<br>--<b><i>New Statesman</i></b></p><p>"I utterly believed in the world that McGuire has created....amazingly impressive set-pieces....[The violence] underlines the point that he is trying to make, a Dickensian point, which is that all privilege rests on squalor." <br>--<b>BBC Radio 4 <i>Saturday Review</i></b></p><p>"Full of foul deeds in a savagely beautiful setting, <i>The North Water</i> is a gripping, pitch-black yarn." <br>--<b><i>Sydney Morning Herald</i></b></p><p>"This is a novel that takes us to the limits of flesh and blood. Utterly convincing and compelling, remorselessly vivid, and insidiously witty, <i>The North Water</i> is a startling achievement." <br><b>--Martin Amis, <i>New York Times </i>bestselling author of <i>Zone of Interest</i></b></p><p> "It's a fast-paced, gripping story set in a world of gruesome violence and perversity, where 'why?' is not a question and murder happens on a whim: but where a very faint ray of grace and hope lights up the landscape of salt and blood and ice. A tour de force of narrative tension and a masterful reconstruction of a lost world that seems to exist at the limits of the human imagination." <br>--<b>Hilary Mantel, <i>New York Times</i> bestselling author of <i>Wolf Hall</i></b></p><p> "<i>The North Water</i> is the rare novel capable of making a past time and place palpable. Ian McGuire writes with a poet's attentiveness to detail, which infuses this dark and violent novel with an unsettling beauty."<br>--<b>Ron Rash, <i>New York Times</i> bestselling author of <i>Serena</i> and<i> Above the Waterfall</i></b></p><p> "<i>The North Water</i> is a whaling novel in the same way that <i>Blood Meridian</i> is a western. I enjoyed the brashness and the economy of the writing, the sense of humanity, and the sly, black humor. The novel wasn't afraid to take chances and I was surprised several times. I was always entertained. . . . An exceedingly well-written historical adventure." <br>--<b>Shannon Burke, author of <i>Into the Savage Country</i></b></p><p> "If one took Melville's dream journal and compiled the nightmares into one harrowing novel, it would be Ian McGuire's <i>The North Water</i>. The claustrophobic conflict between the flawed humanity of Patrick Sumner and the supernatural evil of Henry Drax examines the brutal depths of the human soul." <br>--<b>James Scott, author of <i>The Kept</i></b><br><b> </b><br> "Enthralling and brutal. A vivisection of hard men in a cold world, and a propulsive, suspenseful adventure into the darkness of mortal existence."<br>--<b>Dennis Mahoney, author of <i>Bell Weather</i> and<i> Fellow Mortals</i></b></p>

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