The Benefactor
By (Author) Sebastian Hampson
Text Publishing
The Text Publishing Company
2nd October 2017
Australia
General
Fiction
Paperback
320
Width 154mm, Height 234mm, Spine 24mm
440g
Magazine editor Henry Calder's ordered life has unravelled. He's just been ousted from the glamorous job that gave his life meaning, and he lost his wife, Martha, less than a year ago. Then he meets Maggie, a rebellious young artist working as a bartender. When Maggie is evicted, Henry offers her a place to stay. But there is something about the young woman and her work that disturbs him, and before long Henry is facing a crisis neither of them could ever have foreseen. The Benefactor is about art's power to alter our view of ourselves and our world. It asks how we construct meaning in our lives-and how we react when the foundations we have built our identities upon are knocked out from beneath us.
'Sebastian Hampson is that rare thing: a writer of ideas who is also compulsively readable.' * Nicholas Edlin, author of The Widow's Daughter *
`Sebastian Hampson keeps his focus, pares down the action and the feelings to a close study of Henry and MarthaAt the same time the reader is treated to a glimpse of the high striders in Manhattans art and fashion world from the 1980s to the present that make googling them an interactive pleasure. To be enjoyed with sparkling wine and Beluga caviar.
* Otago Daily Times *
`Sebastian Hampsons second novel is marked by expertise in style and structureAccomplished and interesting. * Sydney Morning Herald *
`Hampsons talent is obviousonce The Benefactor gets into its stride, the novel becomes a crisp characters study, where the actions and philosophies of the past are propelled towards an unexpected crisis. * Dominion Post *
`This book will charm and engage. * Books + Publishing on The Train to Paris *
`Sebastian Hampsonwrites with an assurance that belies his years. A perceptive and thoughtful love story in the tradition of Brief Encounter, inspired by Hampsons travels in Europe, the novel is immediately engrossing. The reader is swept along by the fluidity of the writing. * Australian on The Train to Paris *
'Hilarious at times, sad too, and sometimes slightly shocking, the story grips from the beginning...The dialogue is sharp, and the changes in himself the young man experiences are both touching and realistic...This is a remarkable and sophisticated piece of writing for a young man in his early 20s. Sebastian Hampson is a writer to keep an eye open for.' * Otago Daily Times on The Train to Paris *
Sebastian Hampson is an art historian, screenwriter and fine wine professional. He has lived in France and the United States and is currently based in Auckland, New Zealand.