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0 reviews“Ireland’s finest contemporary novelist.” — The Economist
The first-person prison testimony of Freddie Montgomery - convicted for the ghastly and seemingly motiveless kidnap and murder of a young woman. Trying to make sense of the crime that destroys life - and the career of the friend who unwittingly harbours him - Freddie’s monologue is also an attempt to come to terms with forty years of aimless drifting and dissolution, and to find some glimpse of order in an apparently random world.
"Winner of Ireland's largest literary award for the best book of 1989, Banville's latest is an elegantly written, often darkly comic meditation upon evil and guilt—and a great imaginative leap beyond his previous efforts (Kepler, 1983, etc.)...A novel of high moral seriousness, gracefully written—one that lingers on in the mind long after it is read." - Kirkus Reviews
John Banville is the author of more than fifteen novels, a short story collection, and several mysteries written under the pseudonym Benjamin Black. His novel The Sea won the 2005 Booker Prize. His novel Ancient Light won the Irish Book Award. In addition to winning The Man Booker Prize 2005, he was also shortlisted for his entire body of work, for The Man Booker International Prize 2007 and in 2011 won the Franz Kafka Prize.