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Description
From the prize-winning author of In the Place of Fallen Leaves comes a beautiful, hypnotic pastoral novel reminiscent of Thomas Hardy, about an unexpected friendship between two children, set in Devon in 1911
1911. In a forgotten valley on the Devon–Somerset border, the seasons unfold, marked only by the rituals of the farming calendar. Twelve-year-old Leopold Sercombe skips school to help his father, a carter. Skinny and pale, Leo dreams of a job on the estate's stud farm. He is breaking a colt for his father when a boy dressed in a Homburg, breeches and riding boots appears. Peering under the stranger's hat, he discovers Miss Charlotte, the Master's daughter. And so begins a friendship between the children, bound by a deep love of horses, but divided by rigid social boundaries – boundaries that become increasingly difficult to navigate as they approach adolescence.
Product details
Published | Jan 12 2017 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 320 |
ISBN | 9781408876893 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury USA |
Series | The West Country Trilogy |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Tim Pears's The Horseman, the first novel of a projected trilogy, is. . . a marvelously imagined re-construction of a lost world and vanished way of life. . . I look forward to reading these promised volumes, for this is 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
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The most entrancing novel I read this year is The Horseman by Tim Pears. This intelligent and moving evocation of life on a country estate just before the First World War is both down-to-earth and magical. There are faint echoes of Alain Fournier's masterpiece Le Grand Meaulnes, and there's no higher praise.
Sunday Herald, "Books of the Year"
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Magically immediate.
Times Literary Supplement
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The Horseman is a slow but satisfying burn. As a testament to a forgotten generation of countrymen it is unsurpassed and goes very nicely indeed with a dark night, rain on the windowpane and a cosy armchair.
The Times
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Pears steadily and satisfyingly branches out, unfurling his canvas and introducing characters we want to see more of, plus a raft of unresolved issues and emotions. . . [a] beautiful and engaging novel. Bring on the second act.
Minneapolis Star Tribune
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As a coming-of-age novel, The Horseman is wise and insightful. As a love story, it is moving and sincere. And as a portrayal of rural Edwardian England, it is powerful, vivid and humane.
Observer