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Nostalgia

Hardback

Main Details

Title Nostalgia
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Jonathan Buckley
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:480
Dimensions(mm): Height 222,Width 144
Category/GenreModern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
ISBN/Barcode 9781908745316
ClassificationsDewey:823.914
Audience
General
Edition Main

Publishing Details

Publisher Sort of Books
Imprint Sort of Books
Publication Date 7 March 2013
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

The small Tuscan town of Castelluccio is preparing for its annual festival, a spectacular pageant in which a leading role will be taken by the self-exiled English painter Gideon Westfall. A man proudly out of step with modernity, Westfall is regarded by some as a maestro, but in Castelluccio - as in the wider art world - he has his enemies, and his niece -just arrived from England - is no great admirer either. And a local girl is missing, a disappearance that seems to implicate the artist. But the life and art of Gideon Westfall form just one strand of Nostalgia, a novel that teems with incidents and characters, from religious visionaries to folk heroes. Constantly shifting between the panoramic and the intimate, between the past and the present, Nostalgia is a fiction into which are woven the kaleidoscopic narratives of art, architecture, history, legend and much more.

Author Biography

Jonathan Buckley is the highly praised author of Contact, Telescope and So He Takes the Dog. Nostalgia is his eighth novel. He lives in Hove.

Reviews

Buckley emerges as a mighty creative force. * Sunday Times * Buckley continues to write fiction as if it mattered ... Nostalgia is his eighth novel, and is as strange, as nuanced and as peculiar as everything else he's done, and certainly as good as anything by the dozen or so big brand names of contemporary Eng Lit * Guardian * ... a minor-key masterpiece of restraint, invention and the fine art of keeping expectations deliberately low, then elegantly surpassing them. [...] a portrait of a place as complete as any far-flung cosmos in a science-fiction space opera, and of an intricate trio of characters as intimately knowable and unknowable as any in contemporary fiction. Frankly, if you are holidaying in Italy this summer, I'd pack this instead of, not as well as, your Rough Guide. * Independent * ...works on the reader like a symphony: discursive yet ordered, its many strands held together by an intelligence that is broad in its sympathies and finely attuned to absurdity and pathos. Even an informative chapter on the Italian cypress takes on an emotional resonance in this context ... * TLS * Buckley's novel is impressive for its meditation on art and its rich descriptions ... The book is filled with plausible information - conjuring up the fictitious town, with its history and fauna, and Gideon's career, with reviews and interviews - showing Buckley to be a quietly brilliant writer, almost eccentric in his craftsmanship. * Sunday Times * By its poignant conclusion, this affecting, inventive novel is enough to make you hunt down Buckley's previous works if this is the first time you have come across him. * Sunday Herald * But my book of the year is Jonathan Buckley's breathtakingly clever novel, Nostalgia (Sort of Books). Set in a small Tuscan town it puts before us not only the expatriate protagonists but also the town itself, its history, its local residents and their life histories, all interspersed with scholarly digressions. Wonderful -- Charles Boardman * Guardian Readers' Books of the Year * My favourite book of the year is Nostalgia by Jonathan Buckley (Sort of Books). It is impossible in a few words to do justice to the scope and depth of this multilayered novel, except to recommend it as warmly as possible. It is set in Castelluccio, a small town in Tuscany, the home of an ageing English painter, Gideon Westfall. Through many diffuse strands, which include documentation of Westfall's work, Buckley paints a comprehensive picture of the town's people, history, geography and mythology in a classic evocation of place." -- John Shields * Guardian Readers' Books of the Year *