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A Country Road, A Tree
A Country Road, A Tree
Oct 25, 2024 12:19 PM

Author:Jo Baker,David Rintoul

A Country Road, A Tree

BY THE SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR OF LONGBOURN

Paris, 1939: The pavement rumbles with the footfall of Nazi soldiers marching along the Champs Elysees. A young writer, recently arrived from Ireland to make his mark, smokes one last cigarette with his lover before the city they know is torn apart. Soon, he will put is own life and those of his loved ones in mortal danger by joining the Resistance...

Spies, artists, deprivation, danger and passion: this is a story of life at the edges of human experience, and of how one man came to translate it all into art.

Praise for Jo Baker's LONGBOURN:

'Intoxicating' Guardian

'Engrossing' Sunday Times

'Audacious' New York Times

Reviews

Skilful . . . daring . . . an extraordinary story

—— The Guardian

[It is] the unexpected Beckett that is on show here. Baker pays tribute to a man who joined the French Resistance, narrowly escaped the Gestapo, fled south on foot and went into hiding, and was eventually awarded the Croix de Guerre

—— The Times

A fascinating fictional account of Samuel Beckett's wartime years

—— IAN RANKIN

Beautifully written, empathetic and unflinching, it is very, very good

—— Daily Mail

vivid and well-wrought

—— Times Literary Supplement

Insightful . . . beautifully paced . . . authentic

—— The Irish Times

In this worthy successor to Longbourn, she [Baker] skillfully captures Beckett’s world, the rhythms of his bare-bones prose, and the edginess of his point of view.

—— Publishers Weekly

Taking its title from Beckett's most famous play, Waiting for Godot, Baker's historical drama deftly explores the psyche of one of the greatest writers of the Twentieth Century.

—— Booklist

Perfectly captures the deprivation, despair and constant creeping fear of an occupied people.

—— Red Magazine Must-Read of the Month

This exquisitely crafted novel re-creates the World War II peregrinations of Samuel Beckett and the volatile Frenchwoman who became his life's companion

—— Oprah Magazine

‘Baker . . . creates a compellingly real experience out of Beckett’s work in the French underground . . . Her writing is assured and often intense . . . enthralling.’

—— The Santa Fe New Mexican

Absorbing and searing

—— Washington Post

A major achievement

—— People

Deserves a place on the shelf with The Diary of Anne Frank - set to become a classic

—— USA Today

Zusak makes his ostensibly gloomy subject bearable in the same way Kurt Vonnegut did in Slaughterhouse 5, with grim, darkly consoling humour

—— Time

Zusak's playfulness with language leavens the horror and makes the theme more resonant - words can save your life ...It's a measure of how sucessfully Zusak has humanized these characters that even though we know they are doomed, it's no less devastating when Death finally reaches them

—— Publishers Weekly

One of the most highly anticipated young-adult books in years

—— The Wall Street Journal

'Elegant, philosophical and moving. A work to read slowly and savour. Beautiful and important

—— Kirkus Reviews

Both gripping and touching, a work that kept me up late into the night feverishly reading the last 300 pages

—— Cleveland Plain-Dealer

Zusak's novel is a highwire act of inventiveness and emotional suppleness

—— The Australian

A triumph of control ...one of the most unusual and compelling of recent Australian novels

—— The Age

...the much talked about The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak...should soon have the UK under its spell.

—— Sam Burson , The Western Mail

...this is a novel to touch even the coldest of hearts - definitely 2007's first must-read book.

—— Newmarket Journal

A compelling tale from the start...definitely 2007's first must-read book.

—— Bury Free Press

A moving story from the German perspective of everyday civilian hardship and surivival under the Third Reich. It celebrates the power of words and love, in the face of unutterable suffering

—— Mail on Sunday

Death turns out to be a tender narrator in Zusak's 'The Book Thief' [...] This novel movingly depicts the Himmel Street community, and its orphaned book thief, Liesel Meminger

—— Books Quarterly (Waterstones)

Your emotions by the end of this novel are shot to pieces, but it's well worth it.

—— Guardian

Although already a bestselling children's book, THE BOOK THIEF's insightful and poignant tone and appealing characters...are amply equipped to capture adults, too.

—— Observer
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