<rss version="2.0">
    <channel>
        <title>
            <![CDATA[ Books in the Media: Slimani's third novel a 'panoramic, ambitious tale' ]]>
        </title>
        <link>
            <![CDATA[ https://www.frontlist.in/books-in-the-media-slimanis-third-novel-a-panoramic-ambitious-tale ]]>
        </link>
        <description>
            <![CDATA[ Leïla Slimani's third novel <strong><em>The Country of Others</em></strong> (Faber &amp; Faber) picked up reviews in <em>The Bookseller</em>, the <em>Guardian</em>, the <em>Times</em> and the <em>Financial Times</em> this week.

In the <em>Guardian</em>, the title was Book of the Week in the Fiction in Translation category, where Tessa Hadley wrote: Nothing feels in the least dutiful or cautious, however, in her creation of her fictional characters; she still works her dangerous magic and delivers shocks, imagining the violence of their desires and rages. The novel, which is the first in a planned historical fiction trilogy, was also an Editor's Choice for <em>The Bookseller</em>'s Alice O'Keeffe.

Over in the <em>Times</em>, John Phipps called it a panoramic, ambitious tale that it is a morally difficult, slow-burn story about lives being suffocated by circumstance, one that’s carried off with greater sympathy and realism than anything Slimani has done before.

Finally, in the <em>Financial Times</em>, Houman Barekat wrote that as a didactic snapshot — of a time and a place, a culture and its mores, a moment in history — <em>The Country of Others </em>is a qualified success.

In memoir and biography, Georgia Pritchett's <em><strong>My Mess Is a Bit of a Life</strong></em> (Faber &amp; Faber) picked up five mentions and was named one of the <em>Evening Standard</em>'s best non-fiction titles of the year. It said: We can probably consider her literary royalty now too, since her new memoir, documenting her struggles with anxiety, is already this year’s most Instagrammed book cover.

Pritchett, who is an award-winning TV writer and producer, also landed an interview in the <em>Times</em> with Dominic Maxwell, who called the memoir revealing, but also spare and funny and wise and moving. The author was also interviewed by the <em>i</em>'s Alice Jones.

The memoir received five stars from the <em>Telegraph</em>'s Helen Brown, who said that on every page, raw anxieties are exposed, unpacked and defused with the expert wit you would expect from a comedy writer, whilst in the <em>Irish Times</em>, Amy O'Connor called it a funny, engaging and poignant read that sees Pritchett reminisce on a life defined by worry, insecurity and anxiety.

<em>Source - The BookSeller</em> ]]>
        </description>
        <language>en</language>
        <pubDate>Tue, 08 03, 2021 08:14 am</pubDate>
        <item>
            <title>
                <![CDATA[ Books in the Media: Slimani's third novel a 'panoramic, ambitious tale' ]]>
            </title>
            <link><![CDATA[ https://www.frontlist.in/books-in-the-media-slimanis-third-novel-a-panoramic-ambitious-tale ]]></link>
            <description>
                <![CDATA[ Leïla Slimani's third novel <strong><em>The Country of Others</em></strong> (Faber &amp; Faber) picked up reviews in <em>The Bookseller</em>, the <em>Guardian</em>, the <em>Times</em> and the <em>Financial Times</em> this week.

In the <em>Guardian</em>, the title was Book of the Week in the Fiction in Translation category, where Tessa Hadley wrote: Nothing feels in the least dutiful or cautious, however, in her creation of her fictional characters; she still works her dangerous magic and delivers shocks, imagining the violence of their desires and rages. The novel, which is the first in a planned historical fiction trilogy, was also an Editor's Choice for <em>The Bookseller</em>'s Alice O'Keeffe.

Over in the <em>Times</em>, John Phipps called it a panoramic, ambitious tale that it is a morally difficult, slow-burn story about lives being suffocated by circumstance, one that’s carried off with greater sympathy and realism than anything Slimani has done before.

Finally, in the <em>Financial Times</em>, Houman Barekat wrote that as a didactic snapshot — of a time and a place, a culture and its mores, a moment in history — <em>The Country of Others </em>is a qualified success.

In memoir and biography, Georgia Pritchett's <em><strong>My Mess Is a Bit of a Life</strong></em> (Faber &amp; Faber) picked up five mentions and was named one of the <em>Evening Standard</em>'s best non-fiction titles of the year. It said: We can probably consider her literary royalty now too, since her new memoir, documenting her struggles with anxiety, is already this year’s most Instagrammed book cover.

Pritchett, who is an award-winning TV writer and producer, also landed an interview in the <em>Times</em> with Dominic Maxwell, who called the memoir revealing, but also spare and funny and wise and moving. The author was also interviewed by the <em>i</em>'s Alice Jones.

The memoir received five stars from the <em>Telegraph</em>'s Helen Brown, who said that on every page, raw anxieties are exposed, unpacked and defused with the expert wit you would expect from a comedy writer, whilst in the <em>Irish Times</em>, Amy O'Connor called it a funny, engaging and poignant read that sees Pritchett reminisce on a life defined by worry, insecurity and anxiety.

<em>Source - The BookSeller</em> ]]>
            </description>
            <category>News</category>
            <author>
                <![CDATA[ Frontlist ]]>
            </author>
            <guid>2</guid>
            <pubDate>Tue, 08 03, 2021 08:14 am</pubDate>
        </item>
    </channel>
</rss>
