Available Formats
Today
By (Author) David Miller
Atlantic Books
Atlantic Books
19th April 2011
Main
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Hardback
176
Width 138mm, Height 192mm, Spine 21mm
249g
August, 1924. John Conrad arrives at his parents' home on the outskirts of Canterbury, where family and friends are assembling for the bank holiday weekend. His crippled mother has been discharged from a nursing home, his brother drives down from London with wife and child. But as the guests converge, John's father dies.
Today follows the numb implications of sudden death: the surprise, the shock, the deep fissures in a family exposed through grief. But there is also laughter, fraud and theft; the continuation of life, all viewed through the eyes of Lilian Hallowes - John's father's secretary - never quite at the centre of things but always observing, the still point in a turning world.
Today is a remarkable debut, an investigation of bereavement, family and Englishness, beautiful in its understatement and profound in its psychological acuity.
'David Miller's quiet, subtle novel is not merely a story about Conrad and a tribute to Conrad. It is a Conradian achievement in itself. A wonderful piece of fiction. Moving and revelatory.' --A N Wilson 'A sly chamber-piece of a novel - Miller offers a psychologically convincing portrait of grief, one that - like much of Conrad's own work - suggests the barrier between civilisation and the void is paper thin. An impressive debut distinguished by its spot-on period detail.' --Financial Times 'A slim, quietly elegiac novel on the death of Joseph Conrad... compelling. Conrad's rasping final hours in his country house near Canterbury are played out off-stage, muffled, yet acutely felt.' --Guardian 'Miller's debut packs an emotional, historical punch befitting a much larger canvas.' --Daily Mirror 'A subtle first novel - Its unsensational account of bereavement deserves a wide audience. The restrained prose adds bite to Miller's sparing use of simile.' --Daily Telegraph 'Curious and compelling.' --The Times 'Today resembles a television drama - A sparse, taut novel - Genuinely moving.' --Spectator 'Powerful - a book that, through glances and small observations, keenly makes real the confusion and anger that grief brings and the family fissures - Miller has revealed himself as a first-class writer. Today is moving and simple - a great book.' --Big Issue
David Miller lives in West London with his wife, the writer Kate Colquhoun, and their two sons. He was born in Edinburgh in 1966 and educated in Canterbury and Cambridge. He is the director of the literary agency Rogers, Coleridge and White. Today is his first novel.