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Description
"A wonderful novel. . . Tim Pears combines a down-to-earth rendering of the realities of rural life with a magical sense of another world beyond our everyday experience."--Wall Street Journal
From acclaimed author Tim Pears, the first novel in a sweeping historical trilogy, beginning in rural, pre-WWI England.
Somerset, 1911. The forces of war are building across Europe, but this pocket of England, where the rhythms of lives are dictated by the seasons and the land, remains untouched. Albert Sercombe is a farmer on Lord Prideaux's estate and his eldest son, Sid, is underkeeper to the head gamekeeper. His son, Leo, a talented rider, grows up alongside the master's spirited daughter, Charlotte--a girl who shoots and rides, much to the surprise of the locals. In beautiful, pastoral writing, The Horseman tells the story of a family, a community, and the landscape they come from.
The Horseman is a return to the world invoked in Pears' first award-winning, extravagantly praised novel, In the Place of Fallen Leaves. It is the first book of a trilogy that will follow Leo away from the estate and into the First World War and beyond. Exquisitely, tenderly written, this is immersive, transporting historical fiction at its finest.
Product details
Published | 28 Feb 2017 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 320 |
ISBN | 9781632866950 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Paperbacks |
Series | The West Country Trilogy |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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This is it. This is the real thing. This is whatever I mean by the work of a born writer … The novel is comic, and wry, and elegiac, and shrewd and thoughtful all at once. Please read it'
A. S. Byatt, Daily Telegraph on In the Place of Fallen Leaves
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Too subtle to be sentimental, too well written to be obvious. The author is a gifted storyteller, steeped in country lore and the beauty of ordinary events. Like Thomas Hardy whose kindred spirit quietly animates these pages, he is concerned with the dignity of work, the force of destiny and the consequences of human passion
New York Times Book Review
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Highly atmospheric … It has an intoxicating, magical quality which completely beguiled me
Jeremy Paxman, Independent
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The writing is so genuine. Nothing is posturing or romanticised … There's so much talent here
Barbara Trapido
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An unusually well-made novel which, through being less English than one would expect, produces a very English kind of magic
Giles Foden, Independent on Sunday
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Refreshing … even revelatory … A work that is dense with detail and richly evocative … A very impressive performance
Jane Smiley