Britain's most passionate Francophile takes us on a wonderfully rich, witty tour of Belle Epoque Paris, via the life story of the pioneering surgeon Samuel Pozzi
Julian Barnes is the author of thirteen novels, including The Sense of an Ending, which won the 2011 Man Booker Prize for Fiction, and Sunday Times bestsellers The Noise of Time and The Only Story. He has also written three books of short stories, four collections of essays and three books of non-fiction, including the Sunday Times number one bestseller Levels of Life and The Man in the Red Coat, which was shortlisted for the 2019 Duff Cooper Prize. In 2017 he was awarded the Legion d'honneur.
What a deliciously intelligent entertainment this is, couched in a
prose of enviable suppleness… a master is at work here.
*Daily Telegraph*
One of his best books, very handsomely published too… [The Man in
the Red Coat is] a bravura performance, highly entertaining.
*Evening Standard, Book of the Week*
Do not google Samuel Jean Pozzi. If you want to enjoy Julian
Barnes’s The Man in the Red Coat — and believe me, it’s teeming
with delights — stay away from search engines and trust the author
to tell the story in his own way… punctuated by the sound of
gunshot…[this is a] brilliant, defiantly unconventional book.
*Spectator*
The Belle Époque is brought to life through three colourful lives
in this sparkling account stuffed with top fin-de-siècle
tittle-tattle.
*The Times *The Best Books of 2019**
Julian Barnes’s wonderful The Man in the Red Coat surges round
Belle Epoque Paris… a story full of digressions, white peacocks,
missing limbs, amusing adverbs and fantastic clothes. An absolute
tonic for grey winter days.
*Evening Standard *Books of the Year**
Fascinating history, biography and philosophy rolled into one. In
The Man in the Red Coat, Barnes is the ideal guide to…a delightful
amble through La Belle Epoque… a riveting dissection of an era.
*Independent*
This elegant, seductive history is a book best read in the spirit
of its times. The Man In The Red Coat is less a lesson than a
day-dream of France’s golden heyday. Wrap yourself in a Japanese
tea gown, languish on a peacock-print sofa and abandon yourself to
fin-de-siècle Paris and the ministrations of Doctor Love.
*Mail on Sunday*
As with his masterpiece, A History of the World in 10½ Chapters
(1989), [Barnes’] new book [The Man in the Red Coat] seems
different from anything ever written before.
*Sunday Times*
This lavish study of society surgeon Samuel de Pozzi invites us
into a world of artists, libertines and medical innovation… [it’s]
enjoyably obsessive...biographical detective work.
*Observer, Book of the Week*
Belle-Epoque Paris comes alive in this biography of a pioneering
French doctor, Samuel Jean Pozzi... Barnes, the author of The Sense
of an Ending, sketches his subject's life in fascinating detail,
including entanglements with Henry James, Oscar Wilde and Sarah
Bernhardt.
*New York Times*
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