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Warlight (Vintage International)

Warlight (Vintage International)

Current price: $16.95
Publication Date: April 2nd, 2019
Publisher:
Vintage
ISBN:
9780525562962
Pages:
304
The Book Catapult
1 on hand, as of Mar 27 8:22pm
(Fiction)
On Our Shelves Now

With his usual virtuosity, master storyteller Michael Ondaatje delivers a mysterious, shimmering new coming-of-age novel. Warlight is the unexpected story of two teenagers abandoned by their enigmatic parents in post-war London. Casually watched over by a dodgy cast of characters - petty criminals, opera singers, and panting greyhounds - Nathaniel and Rachel try to make sense of their new world while struggling to define their parents' shadowy wartime pasts. Years later, Nathaniel embarks on a quest to discover the disturbing truth, and his own unwitting part in it. Balancing poignance with surprising comic touches, Warlight is a stellar addition to the Ondaatje canon.

Chrysler Szarlan, Odyssey Bookshop, South Hadley, MA
May 2018 Indie Next List

Ondaatje’s new book, Warlight, is brilliant. The reader is drawn in by a perfect first sentence hinting at the intrigue that will unfold in the novel: ‘In 1945 our parents went away and left us in the care of two men who may have been criminals.’ Teenage Nathaniel and his older sister, Rachel, are left by their parents for reasons that quickly become suspect. The novel is told in parts, beginning with Nathaniel’s teen years, then jumping ahead to his adult years and filling in the histories of the story’s most important characters. The immature voice of teenage Nathaniel is masterfully written as the foreshadowing of the man he will become.

Jen Wills Geraedts, Beagle and Wolf Books & Bindery, Park Rapids, MN
Summer 2019 Reading Group Indie Next List

Description

NATIONAL BESTSELLER • BOOKER PRIZE FINALIST • From the internationally acclaimed, Booker Prize-winning author of The English Patient: “an elegiac thriller [with] the immediate allure of a dark fairy tale” (The Washington Post) set in the decade after World War II that tells the dramatic story of two teenagers and an eccentric group of characters.

In a narrative as beguiling and mysterious as memory itself—shadowed and luminous at once—we read the story of fourteen-year-old Nathaniel, and his older sister, Rachel. In 1945, just after World War II, they stay behind in London when their parents move to Singapore, leaving them in the care of a mysterious figure named The Moth. They suspect he might be a criminal, and they grow both more convinced and less concerned as they come to know his eccentric crew of friends: men and women joined by a shared history of unspecified service during the war, all of whom seem, in some way, determined now to protect, and educate (in rather unusual ways) Rachel and Nathaniel. But are they really what and who they claim to be? And what does it mean when the siblings' mother returns after months of silence without their father, explaining nothing, excusing nothing? A dozen years later, Nathaniel begins to uncover all that he didn't know and understand in that time, and it is this journey—through facts, recollection, and imagination—that he narrates in this masterwork from one of the great writers of our time.

About the Author

MICHAEL ONDAATJE is the author of six pre­vious novels, a memoir, a nonfiction book on film, and several books of poetry. The English Patient won the Booker Prize in 1992 and the Golden Man Booker in 2018; Anil’s Ghost won the Irish Times International Fiction Prize, the Giller Prize, and the Prix Médicis. Born in Sri Lanka, Michael Ondaatje now lives in Toronto.

Praise for Warlight (Vintage International)

Longlisted for the Man Booker Prize
 
A New York Times Notable Book
A Washington Post Notable Book
 
An NPR Best Book of the Year

“An elegiac thriller [with] the immediate allure of a dark fairy tale.” —The Washington Post

“[Ondaatje] casts a magical spell, as he takes you into his half-lit world of war and love, death and loss, and the dark waterways of the past.” —The New York Review of Books

“Mr. Ondaatje has stepped into John le Carré’s world of spies and criminals. . . . His novel views history as a child would, in ignorance but also in innocence and wonder.” —The Wall Street Journal

“[An] intricate and absorbing novel. . . . Brings alive a time and a place.” —The New York Times Book Review

“A rare and beautiful thing—a deeply retrospective novel about war secrets that feels neither overstated nor overly ethereal. . . . One of the most absorbing books I’ve read all year.” — Esi Edugyan, The Times Literary Supplement (London)

“Wonderfully atmospheric, beautifully paced, subtle storytelling. . . . Tells the hidden, barely spoken, tale of war, especially as it impacts on children. Ondaatje skilfully moves back and forth through time, finally offering an extraordinary narrative twist that feels as earned as it is unexpected.” —2018 Man Booker Prize Jury citation

“A meditation on the lingering effects of war on family.” —Barack Obama (personal pick for recommended summer reading)

“Our book of the year—and maybe of Ondaatje’s career. . . . A terrifically tense spy thriller and a delicate coming-of-age tale.” —The Telegraph (London)

“A superb wartime mystery. . . . Ondaatje’s is an aesthetic of the fragment. His novels are constructed, with intricate beauty, from images and scenes that don’t so much flow together as cling together in vibrating, tensile fashion.” —The Boston Globe

“A masterpiece of shifting memory.” —Los Angeles Times

“An intricate ballet of longing and deception. . . . If writers are cartographers of the heart, Michael Ondaatje's oeuvre could fill an atlas.” —O, The Oprah Magazine

“An entrancing and masterfully crafted story.” —The New Republic

“With the force of something familiar, intimate, truthful . . . Warlight sucked me in deeper than any novel that I can remember; when I looked up from it, I was surprised to find the 21st century still going on about me. . . . A work of fiction as rich, beautiful, as melancholy as life itself, written in the visionary language of memory.” —Alex Preston, The Guardian

“Lyrical. . . . Ondaatje illuminates the rubble-strewn landscape [of post-war London] from angled sidelights. . . . His prose matches a mood of mystery and suspicion that tantalizes.” —The Economist

“Fascinating. . . . Lyrical. . . . A mournful, impressionistic memory of all the things that never were.” —Entertainment Weekly

“The author’s prose is as bright and startling as we’ve seen it since The English Patient.” —Condé Nast Traveler

“A haunting mystery. . . . By turns lyrical and wrenching. . . . A rich, satisfying read.” —People

“A tender coming-of-age story . . . warmly delivered. . . . [Ondaatje’s] elegant prose is a pleasure.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune

“Eloquently told and heartbreakingly believable. . . . No other writer builds a world with the delicacy and precision of Michael Ondaatje. You enter it, fall under its spell and never want to leave.” —The Seattle Times

“Exquisite. . . . Elegant, melancholy. . . . Ondaatje keeps the reader in thrall to the story through the sheer excellence of his writing.” —The Dallas Morning News

“[A] quiet, lushly shaded and haunting novel. . . . Immensely rich and rewarding.” —Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

“Gorgeously written. . . . A fog of wonder, fear, tenderness and melancholy.” —Richmond Times-Dispatch 

Warlight is mesmerising, and powerfully sad. . . . This novel dives into the darkness, and finds small miracles among the shattered glass, the ruins.” —Financial Times

“A novel of shadowy brilliance.” —The Times (London)

“Wonderful. . . . This elegiac novel combines the stealth of an espionage thriller with the irresolute shifts of a memory play, purposefully full of fragments, loss and unfinished stories.” —The Daily Mail

“Surprising, delightful, heartbreaking and written as only Ondaatje could write it.” — Kamila Shamsie, The Guardian

“Majestic. . . . Show-stoppingly magnificent. . . . Golden? Adamantine.” —The New Statesman

“Mesmerizing. . . .  One of Ondaatje’s most successful and satisfying novels.” —The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

“Irresistible. . . . An exceptionally entertaining literary journey.” —The Irish Times

“Compulsively and grippingly readable. . . . Michael Ondaatje is a marvellous writer, and Warlight is a novel which will continue to play in the reader’s imagination.” —The Scotsman