Peculiar Ground
By (Author) Lucy Hughes-Hallett
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
6th March 2018
8th March 2018
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
496
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 31mm
350g
One of the best novels of the year so far The Times
A SPECTATOR BOOK OF THE YEAR
Unlike anything Ive read. Haunting and huge, and funny and sensuous. Its wonderful Tessa Hadley
I just enjoyed it so very much Philip Pullman
It is the 17th century and a wall is being built around a great house. Wychwood is an enclosed world, its ornamental lakes and majestic avenues planned by Mr Norris, landscape-maker. A world where everyone has something to hide after decades of civil war, where dissidents shelter in the forest, lovers linger in secret gardens, and migrants, fleeing the plague, are turned away from the gate.
Three centuries later, another wall goes up overnight, dividing Berlin, while at Wychwood, over one hot, languorous weekend, erotic entanglements are shadowed by news of historic change. A little girl, Nell, observes all.
Nell grows up and Wychwood is invaded. There is a pop festival by the lake, a TV crew in the dining room and a Great Storm brewing. As the Berlin wall comes down, a fatwa signals a different ideological faultline and a refugee seeks safety in Wychwood.
From the multi-award-winning author of The Pike comes a breathtakingly ambitious, beautiful and timely novel about game keepers and witches, agitators and aristocrats, about young love and the pathos of aging, and about how those who wall others out risk finding themselves walled in.
A rich layering of history and fiction Erudite, elegant but easy-going One of the best novels of the year so far The Times
Extraordinarily accomplished absolutely involving, thanks to beautiful description and a very fine understanding of human emotion Tolstoyan in its sly wit and descriptive brilliance Humane, thoughtful, compelling and packed with magic, this is a remarkable achievement Guardian
So clever and beautifully written, it gripped me from start to end. I abandoned work and family to finish it Roddy Doyle
Unlike anything Ive read. With its broad scope and its intimacy and exactness, it cuts through the apparatus of life to the vivid moment Tessa Hadley
Hughes-Halletts ambitious first novel dances between past and present, history and modernity magically and movingly evoked, and remains in the imagination long after the reader passes beyond its gates New Statesman
Ambitious and accomplished a polyphonic narrative rich with detail leaves you hoping that this late conversion to fiction will prove only the beginning Observer
A sensual meditation on the nature of paradise Mail on Sunday
A teeming, heaving whirligig of a novel Hughes-Hallett retains terrific control of her subject matter in a novel beautifully alert to the repeating patterns of personal and political history Daily Mail
Happy, tragic, ever expanding and literally ground-breaking Spectator
Characters to get involved with, stories to follow perfect to get lost in Woman & Home
That rare thing: a fresh classic. Ambitious, satisfying and mature, Peculiar Ground is spellbinding Country Life
Richly imagined, impressively detailed admirably ambitious and well written original and intriguing Sunday Times
Richly evocative Tatler
Elegant, inventive, mystical Daily Telegraph
Lucy Hughes-Hallett is the author of The Pike, a biography of Gabriele d'Annunzio, which won the Samuel Johnson Prize for Non Fiction, the Costa Biography Award, the Duff Cooper Prize and the Paddy Power Political Biography of the Year Award. Her other books are Cleopatra: Histories, Dreams and Distortions which was published in 1990 to wide acclaim, and Heroes: Saviours, Traitors and Supermen, published in 2004, which garnered similar praise. Cleopatra won the Fawcett Prize and the Emily Toth Award. Lucy Hughes-Hallett is also a respected critic who has reviewed for all the major British newspapers, and a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. She lives in London.