The Northern Clemency
By Philip Hensher
By Philip Hensher
By Philip Hensher
By Philip Hensher
Category: Literary Fiction
Category: Literary Fiction
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$17.95
Feb 09, 2010 | ISBN 9781400095872
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Oct 22, 2008 | ISBN 9780307271402
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Praise
“A richly textured, closely observed saga. . . . Hensher’s eye for detail is precise and his touch sure. . . . Reminds one of Mrs. Gaskell or even Dickens.”
—Wall Street Journal
“Symphonic. . . . A strong, ambitious work. . . . Hensher creates, with sumptuous thoroughness, a whole world.”
—Seattle Times
“Dazzling. . . . Haunting. . . . Relentlessly enveloping. . . . A piercingly insightful group portrait.”
—The New York Times
“Absorbing. . . . [Hensher] writes with such illuminating attention to the flutterings of everyday hope and despair that you come away from these pages feeling like a more insightful person.”
—The Washington Post
“Admirable. . . . A state-of-the-art state-of-the-nation novel.”
—Wall Street Journal
“Invites comparison to Jonathan Franzen’s The Corrections or Claire Messud’s The Emperor’s Children, but Hensher is a gentler satirist and treats his characters more tenderly.”
—Washington Post
“Universal. . . . Hensher’s humanism, equal parts humor and sympathy, feels especially welcome. Reading it is a bit like wandering through your old neighborhood, listening in on the thoughts of the residents in each house, finally able to apprehend the hilarious, pitiful and miraculous expanse of it all.”
—Salon.com
“Masterful. . . . The real thing: a book that engages with all our daily heartbreak and moments of heady joy as we live fully in the world. . . . A welcome antidote to the often synthetic concerns of too many novels.”
—Richmond Times-Dispatch
“Brilliantly styled. . . . Hensher is fascinatingly good on how social transformation manifests itself in the textures, colours and manners of a culture. . . . Not only extremely funny, but also deeply humane.”
—Sunday Times (London)
“Remarkable. . . . As emotionally engaged as political satire and as compulsively readable as a saga. . . . At the heart of the elegant narrative architecture, the fine comic timing and exuberant detail, there flickers a sense that generosity, a sense of others, is the best we can do. . . . Dazzling.”
—Sunday Telegraph (London)
“A tremendous book. . . . Hensher has composed not so much a condition-of-England as a condition-of-humanity novel, which is gripping and surprising and shocking in all kinds of unpredictable ways, and enormously wide in psychological and moral scope.”
—Philip Pullman, author of The Golden Compass
“Literary magic. . . . An astonishing joy to read.”
—St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“This is the most absorbing and enjoyable novel I’ve read since the heyday of A. S. Byatt. . . . Such is Hensher’s wit and humanity and so rich in detail is his crowded canvas, we soon realize that the novel is indeed a modern epic. . . . You won’t want to skip a single sentence. It strides along, packed with cherishable observations.”
—Roger Lewis, Sunday Express (London)
“Combining [Hensher’s] intelligence with humanity and storytelling drive, The Northern Clemency powerfully slices and preserves 20 years of British life and deserves to be remembered for at least that length of time. . . . As clever and as elegant as Hensher’s previous books.”
—Esquire
“An engrossing and hugely impressive novel. . . . Hensher is a brilliant anatomist of familial tension and marshals his large cast of characters deftly. He has an impeccable eye for nuances of character and setting.”
—The Times (London)
“Dickensian. . . . A portrait of the changing face of northern England from the Thatcher era to the early days of Tony Blair. . . . So precisely rendered, one can easily imagine it becoming required reading for set designers everywhere.”
—Christian Science Monitor
“A truly fine achievement. . . . It is a tribute to Hensher’s powers of invention that this saga becomes so involving that no detail is too small. And Hensher is at his brilliant best in the details.”
—New Statesman (UK)
“An enjoyable nostalgia fest as well as an acute cultural history of provincial England. . . . Engrossing, amusing and moving.”
—Independent (London)
“A fluent and immensely readable piece of work, sustained by a pleasure in its details. . . . There is a timelessness about Hensher’s vision that is quite unusual these days, suggesting a quietly desperate but stable Englishness that carries on unchanged beneath a surface that is slowly becoming a little more glitzy, a little richer.”
—Irish Times
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