Home
/
Fiction
/
When The Emperor Was Divine
When The Emperor Was Divine
Oct 16, 2024 4:52 AM

Author:Julie Otsuka

When The Emperor Was Divine

'A compelling, powerful portrait of a terrible endurance. Terrific' The Times

Four months after Pearl Harbor, signs begin appearing up and down the West Coast instructing all persons of Japanese ancestry to report to 'assembly centers'. For one family - reclassified, virtually overnight, as unwelcome enemies - it is the beginning of a nightmare of oppression and alienation that will alter their lives forever.

There is the mother, reeling from the order to 'evacuate', and the daughter, travelling on the long train journey away from freedom. There is the son, who struggles to adapt to their new life in the dust of the Utah desert, and the father, who, after four bitter years in captivity, returns to his family a stranger.

Based on a true story, Julie Otsuka's powerful, deeply humane first novel tells of a forgotten generation who found themselves imprisoned in their own country, and evokes an unjustly overlooked episode in America's wartime history.

'Outstandingly accomplished and moving' Sunday Telegraph

'Exceptional' New Yorker

LONGLISTED FOR THE ORANGE PRIZE

WINNER OF THE ASIAN AMERICAN LITERARY AWARD 2003

WINNER OF THE AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION ALEX AWARD 2003

Reviews

A remarkable, beautifully written story of panic, prejudice and shame ... outstandingly accomplished and moving

—— Sunday Telegraph

An intense jewel of a book written with clarity and beauty

—— Marie Claire

Vindicates the suffering of the Japanese in America . . . a blistering first novel

—— The Times Literary Supplement

A compelling, powerful portrait of a terrible endurance. Terrific

—— The Times

Exceptional

—— New Yorker

Iggulden tells an absolutely cracking story...the pace is nail-biting and the set dressing magnificent

—— The Times

One of our finest historical novelists

—— Daily Express

Iggulden is in a class of his own when it comes to epic, historical fiction

—— Daily Mirror

Pacy...and packed with action

—— Sunday Times

Breathes new life into the darkest and most dramatic of times

—— Star

Compelling reading

—— Woman and Home

Praise for Conn Iggulden

—— -

An absolutely cracking story. The pace is nail-biting and the set dressing magnificent

—— The Times

Absorbing and bloody

—— Antonia Senior

Peopled with characters so finely honed the story becomes a gripping and glorious legend. Brilliant!

—— Weekend Sport

Quinn's story passes like a fabulous pageant, richly coloured and packed with incident, taking us from the lonely and unorthodox Dorset childhood of the extraordinary Christabel to the poignant aftermath of her heroic Second World War. Quinn has a sublime touch: Cristabel and her troupe are unforgettable, as riotous in comedy as they are heart-breaking in tragedy'

—— Frances Liardet, author of We Must Be Brave

Magnificent. As capacious, surprising and magical as the whale that lends its bones to Cristabel's theatre: a tale of intertwined lives and braided fates as deftly managed and heartbreaking as a Dickens' novel.

—— Rebecca Stott, Costa-winning author of The Days of Rain

Breathes fresh, bracing air into the lungs of the multi-generational saga - and the very form of the novel itself. Few people writing today can match Quinn for the energy and precision of her prose...

—— Susan Elderkin, author of The Story Cure: An A-Z of Books to Keep Kids Happy, Healthy and Wise

I defy any reader not to fall in love... it transported me wholesale to another time and place and while I wandered its pages, I forgot the world for a while

—— Wyl Menmuir, author of Fox Fires

Utterly heart-breaking and joyous ... I just disappeared into THE WHALEBONE THEATRE and didn't want to leave

—— Jo Baker, author of Longbourn

Quite simply brilliant ... The kind of story you sink into, getting totally wrapped up in the characters and their world ... The Whalebone Theatre is a book to treasure

—— Well Read with Anna Bonnet, My Favourite Books of 2022

Far and away my favourite novel of the year ... A gorgeous book, following the lives of three half-siblings from the '20s and through World War II, the same canvas Kate Atkinson has used to such great effect. Love, grief and comedy in perfect balance: it's hard to believe that this accomplished novel comes from a first-timer

—— Mick Herron

Deservedly a surprise bestseller on both sides of the Atlantic ... Absorbing the best parts of Kate Atkinson, Evelyn Waugh and Elizabeth Jane Howard, this is a book to sink into and be propelled along by its brilliant storytelling. Few debuts have been as assured as this; Quinn is a frighteningly talented writer

—— The New European

Elegantly written and totally immersive. Helmed by fierce, imaginative Cristabel, it follows the fate and fortune of the three Seagrave siblings as they stage a theatrical production in their crumbling Dorset manor, and cope with the darkness of World War II and the long shadow it casts over their ramshackle, but golden, childhoods

—— Daily Mail, the best of the year's novels

For all the novel's satirical tang and historical sweep, it's at root a tender portrait of apparently simple folk trying to fathom the mystery of their own personalities

—— Spectator

A tender portrayal of the state of the nation through the prism of family relationships

—— Woman & Home

There is much to enjoy here, as in all Coe's novels . . . an intelligent criticism of our shared history since 1945

—— Scotsman

[Coe] has a huge talent for balancing humour with poignancy

—— Book of the month, Good Housekeeping

Simultaneously intimate and transnational . . . this is deeply engaging, serious and beautiful writing that carries its echoing questions with grace

—— Irish Times

Compelling . . . Superb characterisation and sharp insights throughout make this an immensely enjoyable novel

—— Daily Mirror

Intelligent and enthralling

—— Scotsman

The Magician, Colm Tóibín's new novel about Mann, resists the shallow gestures of Hollywood biopics, reaching for something mainstream film couldn't get at, or wouldn't bother with. How does an artist create, and can a true artist live as the rest of us do?

—— Rumaan Alam , Vulture

This meticulously woven novel re-creates the life of Thomas Mann . . . An ode to a 20th-century genius and a feat of literary sorcery in its own right

—— Oprah Magazine

The personal and public history is compelling . . . an intriguing view of a writer who well deserves another turn on the literary stage

—— Kirkus Reviews, starred review

[The Magician] vibrates with the strength of Mann's visions and the sublimity of Tóibín's mellifluous prose. Tóibín has surpassed himself

—— Publishers Weekly, starred review

This vibrates with the strength of Mann's visions and the sublimity of Tóibín's mellifluous prose. Tóibín has surpassed himself

—— Publishing News

Compelling . . . Tóibín succeeds in conveying his fascination with the Magician, as his children called him, who could make sexual secrets vanish beneath a rich surface life of family and uncommon art . . . intriguing

—— Kirkus Reviews, starred review

Employing luxurious prose that quietly evokes the tortured soul behind these literary masterpieces, Tóibín has an unequalled gift for mapping the interior of genius

—— Booklist, starred review

Literary lovers will want to sink into this absorbing reimagining of the life of the Nobel Prize-winning German writer Thomas Mann . . . Mann family members have their own struggles - with each other and a world where they rarely feel at home - all vividly brought to life

—— AARP

You don't have to be a Thomas Mann fan to be gripped by the account of his life that author Colm Tóibín delivers in his new novel . . . [Tóibín's] his biggest triumph is in getting to the heart of Mann's dilemma

—— Seattle Times

A celebration of what novels can do

—— Observer on ‘House of Names’

Devastatingly human . . . savage, sordid and hauntingly believable

—— Guardian on 'House of Names'

Tremendous, richly beautiful, wonderful . . . it does everything we ought to ask of a great novel

—— Tessa Hadley, Guardian, on ‘Nora Webster’

Subtle and enthralling

—— Sunday Times, on ‘Nora Webster’
Comments
Welcome to zzdbook comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.zzdbook.com All Rights Reserved