Stanley Middleton byl plodný britský autor, jehož rozsáhlé dílo zahrnuje 45 románů. Ve své tvorbě se zaměřoval na hluboké psychologické průzkumy postav a jejich vnitřních světů. Jeho romány se často zabývají tématy morálky, vztahů a lidské povahy. Middletonův literární styl je známý svou precizností a subtilním vykreslením emocí.
'His reputation, built book by book, as an astute observer of middle-England
bourgeois life and as a writer whose reach extends far beyond his immediate
milieu, is probably now invulnerable.' Nicholas Wroe.' Times Literary
Supplement 'Every page is taut with inner strength and truth.' Mail on Sunday
A novel from the Booker-Prize winning author Stanley Middleton. But only Mr
Middleton could turn it into something approaching a small masterpiece.'
Martyn Goff, Daily Telegraph'Increasingly, Middleton's command of the ordinary
has become extraordinary...
A family faces fundamental changes, together and apart. 'This humane book digs
patiently beneath the surface of ordinary lives to the rock of universal
truths.' Sunday Times'Stanley Middleton, once dubbed 'The Chekhov of
suburbia', is to the Midlands suburb what Anne Tyler is to the Midwest picket
fence.
He wrote a calm, whispering prose, full of unspoken suggestion between
ordinary acts of daily living.' Jenny Diski'He shows us the way we age and die
now, with real and graceful disstinction.' Sunday Times
From Booker-Prize winning novelist Stanley Middleton.When his father, a coal
miner, dies Thomas decides to write a requiem for him which is also a thinly
veiled attack on the powerful elite. In spite of opposition he finally
succeeds in getting his work performed but how will the critics react?
The narrative offers a captivating blend of entertainment and sophistication, showcasing the author's elegant prose. Readers can expect a delightful experience that combines a well-crafted story with literary finesse, promising to enhance their enjoyment of the text.
Edwin Fisher is on holiday at the English seaside - but this revisiting of childhood haunts is no ordinary holiday. Edwin is seeking to understand the failure of his marriage to Meg, but it turns out that her parents are staying at the same resort - whether by accident or design - and are keen to patch up the relationship. As the past and his enigmatic wife loom larger, deeper truths emerge and the perspective shifts in unexpected ways. This is an extremely subtle story, a consummate portrait of English provincial life told with all Stanley Middleton's artistry and depth of feeling. It was joint winner of the Booker Prize in 1974. 'At first glance, or even at second, Stanley Middleton's world is easily recognizable... The excellence of art, for Middleton, is an exact vision of real things as they are. And because he is himself so exact an observer, his world at third glance can seem strange and disturbing or newly and brilliantly lit with colour.' A.S. Byatt