<b>A classily written crime novel that is also an atmospheric evocation of a bygone era</b>.

The Sunday Times

<b>Darkly beautiful...</b> <i>The Kept</i> is a rare blend of brutality and empathy, emotion and close observation. <b>I thought at times of Cormac McCarthy's work and of the novels of David Vann. At other times it brought to mind Stef Penney's <i>The Tenderness Of Wolves </i>and Charles Frazier's <i>Cold Mountain</i>.</b> But there's something wonderfully distinctive about <i>The Kept</i>... <b>A literary page-turner of the highest calibre by a writer of serious talent</b>.

- Jonathan Lee, author of JOY,

<b>Mysterious and compelling</b>... James Scott has written <b>a riveting and memorable debut</b> novel.

- Tom Perrotta, author of The Leftovers,

Se alle

With its vivid sense of time and place, lyrical writing, and complex questions of what constitutes a family, <i>The Kept</i> is <b>an outstanding debut by a bright new voice in fiction</b>.

- Ron Rash, author of Serena and The Cove,

Winter and discontent... <b>Scott is the master of mood</b>... Haunting'

New York Times Book Review

<b>Dark and mysterious</b>… A novel whose daring is found in its bleakness… <b>The plot unfolds with a weighty languor reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy</b>… Sparse, elegant… haunting.

New York Times

<b>Reads with the stark clarity of a Johnny Cash song</b>

Washington Post

<b>Feels like the shell of a Cormac McCarthy novel filled with the intricate yearning and familial strife of a Lorca play</b>… A gripping combination I don’t think we’re likely to find anywhere else.

The Rumpus

<b>Dark and brutal</b>… Never lets up until the climactic scene, in prose that’s brooding and intense right up until the final paragraph… <b>So packed with incident and character, and so fluidly paced, that it’s brought vividly to life by Scott’s meticulous control</b>

Toronto Star

<b>Scott is [a] master storyteller in this outstanding debut</b>

Kirkus (starred review)

HOW FAR WOULD YOU GO FOR YOUR FAMILY, FOR LOVE, FOR REVENGE?

'Dark and mysterious ... reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy ... Sparse, elegant ... haunting.' New York Times

In the winter of 1897, Elspeth Howell returns home to her isolated farmstead to find her family brutally murdered. Only her twelve-year-old son, Caleb, survives.

Mother and son set out into the frozen wilderness to track down the men responsible for this horrific crime. Their search takes them to the ice-locked shores of Lake Erie, and a merciless town where violence abounds. As Caleb is forced into a brutal adulthood, he begins to uncover truths about his family he could never have anticipated, while Elspeth must confront secrets she has long kept hidden. Together, they discover the bond between mother and son may be their only hope for redemption.

Les mer

HOW FAR WOULD YOU GO FOR YOUR FAMILY, FOR LOVE, FOR REVENGE?

'Dark and mysterious ... As Caleb is forced into a brutal adulthood, he begins to uncover truths about his family he could never have anticipated, while Elspeth must confront secrets she has long kept hidden.

Les mer
How far would you go for your family, for love, for survival, for revenge? A debut novel of big skies, deep snow, and open wounds.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780099559047
Publisert
2015
Utgiver
Cornerstone
Vekt
256 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Dybde
23 mm
Aldersnivå
01, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
368

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

James Scott has published short fiction in American literary reviews and journals, including Ploughshares, One Story, American Short Fiction and Post Road, and has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and Best New American Voices. He writes for the music magazine Under the Radar, is an issue editor at One Story, and teaches at Grub Street in Boston. The Kept is his first novel and has been longlisted for the Flaherty-Dunnan First Novel Prize. He lives in western Massachusetts, America.