Books for Independent Thinkers

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Book Details

  • Paperback
  • 288 pages
  • ISBN 978-1-901927-43-6
  • Publisher Route

Details

A doctor’s life is stirred up by the disappearance of his friend’s girlfiend, placing him in a position of power which threatens to ruin his professional integrity. Will it make or break him? Set in London during the hostage crisis of 2004, this is a study in modern heroism, set against a background of superheated thinking and sexual oblivion.

"Stylish, very funny, discreetly surprising, this remarkable novel reads at times like a fable of England under New Labour, where nothing is quite what it seems and not much is worth what it costs."
Michael Wood, London Review of Books

"Jules et Jim with a postmodern twist. Nath has a confidence and attitude that rocks you on every page."
Daisy Goodwin

"The writing, which is clever, witty and ambitious throughout, becomes shot through with a wonderfully oneiric unpredictability... Nath can entertain with a whole page on different interpretations of what is meant by "a while", and many of his similes and observations – "she gave me a BBC-drama kind of look", "distant-eyed as a dentist's assistant" – are original, funny and absolutely spot-on. Now we rely on small independent publishers such as Route, often based outside London, to support authors such as Michael Nath. It's up to us: order your copy now."
Nicholas Royle, The Independent

"... the writing is the star of the show; Nath has a distinctive style that blends a lyrical and yet chatty stream of consciousness with flashes of magic realism. A curious and original aspect to the novel is that Mark is of mixed race and yet, in defiance of current literary trends, absolutely nothing is made of this. The struggle to be heroically masculine in the modern world is the novel’s overriding theme, and Mark and Ian are amusing and depressingly recognisable portraits of ungallant metropolitan men."
The Spectator

"... a wonderfully intriguing novel... Nath sets the book in London during 2004 and gives a stark sense of life under New Labour's middling years as he describes a generation of surplus university graduates who have to take what life gives them and lack the material ambitions of promotion and property... His descriptive powers give the novel a wonderful realism, his protagonist inhaling his Rothman's 'like a hoover' as Ian tries to justify his past infidelities over another pint in their favourite pub. Fortunately, the author also has the wherewithal and wit to sustain this tale to its entertaining conclusion."
Big Issue

Michael Nath was brought up in South Wales and Lincolnshire. He is a lecturer in English at the University of Westminster. La Rochelle is his first novel.

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La Rochelle