The Right Hand of Sleep
By (Author) John Wray
Vintage Publishing
Vintage
1st February 2002
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
Historical fiction
First World War fiction
Narrative theme: Politics
Narrative theme: Love and relationships
813.6
Paperback
336
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 21mm
235g
'A fascinating and honest book' The Times Oskar Voxlauer is in flight from his past - from his bourgeois Austrian upbringing; from horrific memories of fighting on the Italian Front in 1917; and from the twenty years he has spent in the Ukraine watching his Bolshevik ideals crumble and the physical decline of the woman who taught him about love. In 1938, he finally returns to the small Austrian town of his birth where his mother is waiting to greet a son she hasn't seen since he was a boy.But, despite Oskar's attempts to live a reclusive existence as a gamekeeper up in the hills, he cannot escape the tensions that are threatening the tranquil town of Niessen. When Hitler marches into Austria and the Blackshirts come to the valley.
The ghost hovering over this assured and astonishingly mature first novel is that of Joseph Roth... Wray's novel displays psychological acuity, a mastery of dialogue and an unfailing historical empathy * Publishers Weekly *
A truly arresting work of fiction * New York Times Book Review *
A taut, searing portrait of the effects of Nazism on the psychic and physical landscape of Austria... The clarity of Wray's prose style both belies and reveals the depth and scope of this concerns * Literary Review *
A fascinating and honest book * The Times *
John Wray was born in Washington, DC in 1971, the son of an Austrian mother and an American father, both scientists. His childhood was divided between the United States and Austria and this novel draws on his Austrian family history. In 1996 a selection of his poems won a prize from the Academy of American Poets and New York University. He currently lives in Brooklyn where he is working on a second novel.