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Starred review from September 3, 2018
Harvey (Dear Thief) weaves a dazzling tapestry around loss and confession in late-15th-century England in this breathtaking novel. Thomas Newman, benevolent landlord and relative newcomer to the hamlet of Oakham, disappeared into the river on the Saturday before Ash Wednesday. Parish priest John Reve recounts the icy unnamed rural dean’s condescending investigation into the death across four days in reverse order, beginning on Shrove Tuesday, the day Newman’s shirt is found near the river. The dean urges Reve to report any information gleaned from the parish’s pre-Lent confessions to determine if Newman was killed, slipped, or committed suicide. During his investigation, Reve hears about the mundane mistakes, distressing habits, and intentionally aggressive mutterings from a number of possible suspects. There’s Lord Townshend, the landowner who has reluctantly sold holdings to Newman to pursue his quixotic cheese-making endeavors; Herry Carter, who thought of Newman as a father but is behaving as if he needs to atone; Sarah Spenser, who keeps confessing to the murder but may be seeking the relief of death from her wasting disease; and other shady types with suspicious reactions. Amid his attempts to deflect the dean’s intrusions and comfort his flock, Reve mourns his sister’s recent departure and recalls Newman’s friendly jabs against priestly intercession in favor of personal piety. Harvey’s final chapter unspools the truth of Newman’s death and Reve’s own surprising secrets. The lush period details and acute psychological insight will thrill fans of literary mysteries and historical fiction. This is an utterly engrossing novel. Agent: Jim Rutman, Sterling Lord Literistic.
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September 15, 2018
An imposing medieval mystery about a fearful religious community in the grips of secrecy.In her fourth novel, Harvey (Dear Thief, 2014, etc.) has meticulously fashioned a historical mystery set in Oakham, a small, damp village in southwestern England, isolated by a river and buffeted by chilly winds. Its economy is weak, its villagers "scrags and outcasts." It's the year 1491. Wealthy, beneficent landowner Thomas Newman has talked about building a bridge. On Shrove Saturday eve he drowns in the river; the body is missing. Accident? Murder? Suicide? The dean of the local church, a man who had "a nose for the nasty," has instructed John Reve, a burdened young priest and our narrator, to solve the mystery quickly and punish the guilty. Is Reve reliable? Did he kill Newman? Reve laments that in "desperate times people do desperate things: they steal, they lie, they cheat, they despair, they forsake Mass." But this is no British cozy. Harvey has subtly crafted a complex narrative by adding another twist--the story goes backward. Reve's narration takes place over the "four days of Shrovetide before Lent," beginning on Tuesday, Feb. 17, and ending on Saturday the 14th, the night Newman died. Reve, as jury, will collect the evidence and, as judge, identify the killer. His court is his "little dark box," the "crude and childish" confessional. The villagers come to confess their sins, some even pleading, "I killed Newman." Reve listens, dissuades, and blesses--"Benedicite, Dominus, Confiteor"--with a "hefty pardon," performing his "endless, thankless job, this one of serving God." Harvey provides a wide array of intriguing, mostly pitiful suspects, each bearing some guilt, who live, Reve says, "in wariness at the whims and punishments of God." The story is told in pensive, faux medieval prose, with chapter titles that suggestively repeat back and forth as the overall narrative inexorably, circuitously unwinds from present to past.A dazzling, challenging read but one worth taking on.
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Starred review from September 15, 2018
The events of four days, detailed in reverse and through the eyes of a parish priest, John Reve, tell the story of a drowning death in the Somerset, England, village of Oakham in 1491. The death of the village's richest citizen, a man named Newman, who may have committed suicide or been murdered, frames Reve's crisis of faith, which, in turn, colors the very landscape and shapes his judgment, corporeal and, perhaps, eternal. Oakham is an isolated village, cut off from others by its failed bridge and constantly plagued by dreadful weather, flooding, illness, and death. Its denizens are gray, in dress and spirit, and, as Reve hears their paltry confessions, he tasks them with atonement and asks them (and himself) to work their way back to God's grace. The county dean arrives after Newman's drowning, requiring answers that Reve is loath to give honestly?a necessary deception. Harvey evokes the darkness of both winter and spirit with stark yet lovely imagery: I didn't know how the trees kept their enthusiasm for growing. Reve's meditations on purgatory, illness as punishment, priestly intervention, God in nature, and the nature of sin are mirrored in the story as the characters grapple with the grief of loss and the frustration of ambiguity. Like Mary Doria Russell's The Sparrow (1996) and Morris West's The Last Confession? (2001), this compulsively readable portrait of doubt and faith reveals, in small lives, humanity's biggest questions.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)
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September 15, 2018
Told in quietly arresting prose, this new book from award-winning British author Harvey (Dear Thief) is set in 1491 Oakham, a not terribly prosperous village now bone-sodden after a particularly dreary winter. As the work opens, Thomas Newman, Oakham's wealthiest man, has been lost to the swollen river on Shrove Saturday, whether by his hand, by another's, or by accident no one knows. Conscientious pastor John Reve tries to comfort his flock while holding off the preening, sanctimonious dean, who is eager to find fault with John's ministry and convict someone for Thomas's murder. The story unfolds backward in time from Shrove Tuesday to the day of Thomas's death, with John hearing confession from his carefully sketched parishioners, pondering his friendship with the deceased (they argued intriguingly about theology), and recalling his own family, including a sister just lost to him through marriage. As the narrative moves to a superbly conceived ending, Thomas emerges as a good but grieving man, and it soon becomes clear that John understands more of what happened than he lets on. VERDICT Highly recommended for readers of literary and historical fiction. [See Prepub Alert, 5/21/18.]--Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal
Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Guardian
"A medieval mystery from one of the UK's most exquisite stylists."
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Alice O'Keeffe, The Bookseller
"My book of the year . . . It is quite unlike anything else I have read . . . Samantha Harvey is not half as well-known as she should be . . . This, her fourth novel, deserves to break her through to a wider audience . . . The truly extraordinary thing about this novel is the way Harvey re-creates the mindset and beliefs of the medieval world, and makes the concerns of 500 years ago vivid and immediate."
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Alex Preston, Guardian (Best Fiction for 2018)
"Set in the 1400s but never feeling dusty or distant, this astonishing book is at once a rollicking mystery and profound meditation on faith and existence."
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James Kidd, Post Magazine, South China Morning Post (Must-Read Books in 2018)
"Trumping all the above might be Samantha Harvey, whose relative anonymity should end if her next novel, The Western Wind, does as well as it deserves . . . A murder mystery, an acute dissection of class and money, and fabulously written."
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Joanna Kavenna, author of A Field Guide to Reality
"The Western Wind is an extraordinary, wise, wild and beautiful book--a thrilling mystery story and a lyrical enquiry into ideas of certainty and belief. Surprising, richly imagined, gloriously strange--the best kind of fiction."
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Nathan Filer, author of The Shock of the Fall
"Harvey is up there with the best writers working today. Here she makes the medieval world feel as relevant and pressing as tomorrow morning because--as always--she captures the immutable stuff of the human condition."
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James Wood, New Yorker
"Beautiful . . . Harvey's book is propelled not by the usual structures of novel writing but by the quality of its author's mind, by the luminousness of her prose, and by an ardent innocence of speculation that is rare in contemporary fiction. It is a strange and exhilarating journey, unlike anything I have recently encountered . . . I was at moments reminded of Marilynne Robinson . . . Remarkable."
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Michael Cunningham
"Dear Thief is a novel of profound beauty. I'll leave it at that."
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Tessa Hadley
"A glorious, sensuous, grown-up novel, intelligent and passionate."
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A.M. Homes
"Dear Thief is a hypnotic, beautiful and sometimes dark incantation. . . Samantha Harvey's novel is a deftly drawn reminder of our deeply human desire for connection and the risk involved in the revelation of that desire."
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Nicholas Mancusi, The Daily Beast
"An unblinking examination of art and love and death as different emanations of the same truth . . . philosophical, atmospheric, and masterful."
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Claire Kilroy, Guardian
"Harvey's innovations electrify every word . . . [with] an educated and meditative voice, reminiscent of those deployed by great stylists such as WG Sebald, Claire Messud, John Banville and Joseph O'Neill . . . it is so intimate, so honest, so raw. Dear Thief provokes you to think about life, and Life, and your own life, the people in it as well as the ghosts."
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Gaby Wood, Daily Telegraph
"One of the most beguiling novels of the year... Harvey's language is poetic, in a way that's brave rather than sentimental, and her intricate observations demand to be dwelled upon. . . [Harvey] is this generation's Virginia Woolf."
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Carolyn See, Washington Post
"Closer to Virginia Woolf's meditative novels than anything else I can think of . . . This book is less about the erasure of one man's life than about the vulnerability of an entire culture."
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Sue Halpern, New York Times Book Review
"[A] brave imagining of [Alzheimer's] . . . Earlier in her life, Samantha Harvey studied philosophy, and that training is felt here . . . Every life is a mystery, Harvey seems to be saying, even to the one whose life it is."
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Bookforum
"The Wilderness is Samantha Harvey's first novel, but it feels like a mature work, as well crafted and as cryptic."
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Times (London)
"A really exciting debut is as rare as it ever was. Samantha Harvey's first novel is an extraordinary dramatization of a mind in the process of disintegration . . . Brilliant."