“Ingenious and engaging . . . The book as narrator lives in the real world, aware that its own survival and that of its kind cannot be taken for granted. Like the hero of The Tin Drum or The Good Soldier Schweik, it is a figure of complex and unholy innocence trying to make sense of an encroaching darkness. The idea of story in The Pages is multi-layered and fabulously unstable . . . Marvellous.” —Colm Tóibín, The Guardian “Perceptive and subtly humorous . . . Mr. Hamilton’s keen eye—which lights equally on landscape and human eccentricity—and his benevolent wit, both so evident is his superb memoir The Speckled People, here deepen and humanize a commendably erudite and earnest novel . . . All the suppleness and precision of Roth’s writing—the way he swoops from the lofty, always punctured, to the quotidian—is wonderfully conveyed in Mr. Hoffman’s graceful translation, as is the beauty of Roth’s imagery.” — Anna Mundow, The Wall Street Journal “Formally daring, richly rewarding . . . This multifaceted novel about belonging, oppression and the enduring power of storytelling is brilliantly ingenious and utterly absorbing.” —Malcolm Forbes, Minneapolis Star-Tribune “Irish writer Hamilton performs a provocative feat . . . By astutely meshing a suspenseful quest, a sharply relevant homage to Roth, and intricate stories of persecution, exile, war, censorship, love, and anguish, Hamilton has created a tale of deep resonance.” —Donna Seaman, Booklist [starred review] “A haunting story that provides a welcome reminder of the enduring lives of books . . . [ The Pages] neatly balances realistic storylines with fanciful images described in Rebellion’s distinctive, appealing voice.” —Kirkus Reviews [starred review] “Hamilton; who has drawn on his own Irish-German ancestry in novels such as Dublin Palms and his outstanding memoir The Speckled People, avoids indigestion with a brisk and swift narrative style that echoes Roth’s own. Although ideas of memory, legacy and repetition — the indelible imprints of history — fill The Pages, it moves with a fast and fluid gait . . . With The Pages, as with Roth himself, fable rather than reportage gains the upper hand. It reminds us that, even in an age when people ‚live in a rush to forget‘ (Roth’s words), we must read the book of the past in order to understand the present.” —Boyd Tonkin, Financial Times “With flair and feeling, Hamilton weaves Roth’s work through his own, in this imaginative act of storytelling.” —Irish Independent “This book simply must be read, it’s magnificent.” —Sunday Independent ‚Brilliant. It’s a lovely, rich, strange book, very truthful and moving, with a beautiful ending.‘ — Tessa Hadley ‚A powerful, powerful piece of work. A wounded book making its own book. It brings so much to life—Joseph Roth, Chechnya, Germany, the art of writing, the whole notion of banning books, the lips of the past speaking to the present.‘ —Colum McCann, best-selling author of Apeirogon ‚An ingenious conceit.‘ —John Banville ‚A masterpiece. Full of great sentences. But also sort of obliteratingly moving, strange, and right.‘ —Sebastian Barry
ISBN: 978-0-593-32066-2