Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 10th February 2023
Paperback
Published: 22nd July 2021
Hardback
Published: 27th October 2021
The Pages
By (Author) Hugo Hamilton
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
10th February 2023
7th July 2022
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Metaphysical / philosophical fiction
Thriller / suspense fiction
Fiction in translation
Alternative history fiction
Fiction: narrative themes
823.92
Paperback
304
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 19mm
210g
Part thriller, part treasure hunt and part love story Profound and heartbreaking Sunday Times
A terrific, engrossing novel Roddy Doyle
A masterpiece Sebastian Barry
A rich, strange book. Very truthful and moving Tessa Hadley
The new novel about the transformative power of art, the weight of history and the strange connection we make with one another, from the author of The Speckled People.
The narrator of The Pages is not a human but a book: a first edition of Joseph Roths masterpiece Rebellion, rescued from a Nazi book-burning in 1933. In recounting its history, it tells a multitude of stories: of Andreas, the character who lives in its pages; of its current owner, a woman whose discovery of a hand-drawn map in the book begins a thrilling mystery; and of Roth himself, a writer on the run. Together, they form a compelling story about art, nationalism, the weight of history, and the strange connections between us.
This book simply must be read. It is magnificent Irish Independent
A powerful, powerful piece of work Colum McCann
Praise for The Pages:
'Brilliant. It's a lovely, rich, strange book, very truthful and moving, with a beautiful ending' Tessa Hadley
It is a masterpiece. The Alignment of the destructive forces of the 1920s and the 2020s in this virtuoso work are uncanny and, frankly, alarming. This book simply must be read. It is magnificent Sunday Independent
A classic Joseph Roth novel takes centre stage in this mix of thriller, treasure hunt and love storyprofound and heart-breaking Sunday Times
'A powerful, powerful piece of work. A wounded book making its own book. It brings so much to life Joseph Roth, Chechnya, Germany, the art of writing, the whole notion of banning books, the lips of the past speaking to the present' Colum McCann
'A terrific, engrossing novel. I love the narrator such a great character and the structure is clever and carefully woven, and very satisfying' Roddy Doyle
'An ingenious conceit' John Banville
'A masterpiece. Full of great sentences. But also sort of obliteratingly moving, strange, and right' Sebastian Barry
Wonderful. It is as if Hugo Hamilton has invented a new form Neil Jordan, author of Carnivalesque
Although ideas of memory, legacy and repetition the indelible imprints of history fill The Pages, it moves with a fast and fluid gait It reminds us that, even in an age when people live in a rush to forget (Roths words), we must read the book of the past in order to understand the present Boyd Tonkin, Financial Times
The form itself a novel narrated by a novel is so cunningly realised that its accepted almost immediately. It also inspires the thought: why are more novels not told like this its a fascinating work of real depth that combines biography, fiction and history to create a manifesto for the importance of literature in the times of political dismay Business Post
Hugo Hamilton is the author of nine novels, two memoirs and a collection of short stories. His work has won a number of international awards, including the 1992 Rooney Prize for Irish Literature, the 2003 french Prix Femina Etranger, the 2004 Italian premio Giuseppe Berto and a DAAD scholarship in Berlin. He has also worked as a writer-in-residence at Trinity College, Dublin. Hamilton was born and lives in Dublin.