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The Schooldays of Jesus

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title The Schooldays of Jesus
Authors and Contributors      By (author) J. M. Coetzee
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:288
Dimensions(mm): Height 198,Width 128
Category/GenreModern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
ISBN/Barcode 9781925498844
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Text Publishing
Imprint The Text Publishing Company
Publication Date 2 October 2017
Publication Country Australia

Description

The Schooldays of Jesus, is the startling sequel to J. M. Coetzee's widely praised The Childhood of Jesus David is the small boy who is always asking questions. Sim n and InUs take care of him in their new country. He is learning the language; he has begun to make friends. He has the big dog BolYvar to watch over him. But he'll be seven soon. He should be at school. And so David is enrolled in the Academy of Dance in Estrella. It's here, in his new golden dancing slippers, that he learns how to call down the numbers from the sky. But it's here too that he will make troubling discoveries about what grown-ups are capable of. The Schooldays of Jesus, the startling sequel to J. M. Coetzee's widely praised The Childhood of Jesus

Author Biography

Winner of the 2003 Nobel Prize for Literature J. M. Coetzee's books include Dusklands, In the Heart of the Country, Waiting for the Barbarians, Life & Times of Michael K, Foe, and The Master of Petersburg (all available from Penguin). A professor of general literature at the University of Cape Town, Coetzee has won many literary awards, including the CNA Prize (South Africa's premier literary award), the Booker Prize, the Prix Etranger Femina, the Jerusalem Prize, and the Irish Times International Fiction Prize. Nobel Prize for Literature- Winner 2003 Jerusalem Prize Man Booker Prize for Fiction- Winner Lannan Literary Award for Fiction

Reviews

'The Schooldays of Jesus by JM Coetzee is maddening, obscure - and brilliant.' * Telegraph * 'An intimacy born from urgency crackles through each of [Coetzee's] books, as if one is not reading a text but being plugged into a brand new form of current-reinvented each time to carry a new and urgent form of narrative information...Coetzee is the most radical shapeshifter alive.' * John Freeman, Australian * 'Obscurely compelling, often very funny, full of sudden depths...The Schooldays of Jesus is a work of many small but significant truths, rather than one central message; a novel stubbornly committed to its own way of doing things.' * Guardian * 'The continuation of a masterpiece that is breathtaking and enthralling in its strangeness.' -- Peter Craven * Australian Book Review, 2016 Books of the Year * 'Beautiful but enigmatic fable, written in clean, fierce, present tense prose, seems set in some sort of afterlife...insistently memorable in its spare evocations, it leaves the reader charmed, intrigued, impressed and curious, with much compulsively to ponder.' * Adelaide Advertiser on The Childhood of Jesus * 'The Childhood of Jesus represents a return to the allegorical mode that made him famous...a Kafkaesque version of the nativity story...The Childhood of Jesus does ample justice to his giant reputation: it's richly enigmatic, with regular flashes of Coetzee's piercing intelligence.' * Guardian * 'Yet although it is written with the coolness and limpidity that make Coetzee such a master, the story remains almost uninterpretable, certainly no simple allegory, quite an achievement in itself. Frustrating, yes, but not just that. There were moments when I found it almost too affecting to read without pausing to recover myself.' * Evening Standard * 'At sentence level, he [Coetzee] is, of course, a model of clarity - think of the dry and unornamented perspicuity Coetzee brings to bear in his fiction, the fastidiousness of thought that emits from his creations the way a dot matrix printer unspools. Yet the cumulative effect of this approach is not arid intellection but organic feeling: full-fleshed, mysterious and often extreme.' * Monthly * 'A theological and philosophical fable of considerable brilliance, power and wit. Coetzee hasn't done anything as fine and beautifully executed as this since Disgrace.' * Canberra Times on The Childhood of Jesus * 'Double Booker Prize-winner Coetzee's fable has a dream-like, Kafkaesque quality. Are we in some kind of heaven, purgatory or simply another staging post of existence? Clear answers are elusive, but this is a riveting, thought-provoking read and surely Coetzee's best novel since Disgrace more than a decade ago.' * Daily Mail on The Childhood of Jesus * '[A] quiet, haunting novel...Coetzee's calm, emblematic prose lifts the plot into something redolent with metaphor and mystery...Any statement can become a symbol; every event is suffused with potential revelation; something magical is always present and just out of reach...It's a memorable accomplishment, turning the everyday into the almost everlasting.' * Weekend Herald (NZ) on The Childhood of Jesus * 'The way [Coetzee] mixes the enigmatic and almost otherworldly elements of this child with his youthful and innocent questions makes David the perfect mix of endearing, enraging, and enlightening. He's as believable as characters come.' * Bookmunch * 'Freed from literary convention, Mr Coetzee writes not to provide answers, but to ask great questions.' * Economist * 'Coetzee's depiction is unlike any other you've read. Rather, it's decidedly 'Coetzeean'...Eloquent and provocative.' * Readings * 'The indeterminacy...gives the two Jesus novels their air of unreality and their vaguely allegorical sheen, but it also provides a conveniently stripped-back setting in which to stage philosophical arguments.' * Sydney Review of Books * 'These are novels for our time...They will puzzle you and frustrate you but at the end of Schooldays you will catch a glimpse of the things unseen.' * Online Opinion * 'What the reader will remember will be the pleasures available to anyone: the deadpan humor, the swoons of their melodramatic thriller plots, and the beguiling weirdness of the world Coetzee has constructed.' * Harper's * 'Whenever I want to destroy the world in my head in order to discover an invisible truth, I am sure I will pick up this book again.' * Sayaka Murata * 'A phenomenal achievement in fiction...The narrative is consistently moving and profound, and incredibly self-sufficient. It creates its own rules and contains everything it needs. To me the journey of the boy David and those around him came across as a fable about our inspiring but ultimately doomed search for meaning. It states the importance of caring for each other, of committing to care, even when social struggle and the worst tendencies of the human spirit get in the way. And in the end literature itself proves to be the strongest tool for meaning and maybe transcendence. I'm eager to read the whole thing again.' * Daniel Galera *