The thrilling new novel from the Booker Prize-winning and bestselling author of The Luminaries, now in paperback.
ELEANOR CATTON is the author of The Luminaries (Granta, 2013), winner of the Man Booker Prize and the Governor General's Literary Award and an international bestseller. Her debut novel, The Rehearsal (Granta, 2009), won a Betty Trask Award, was shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award and the Dylan Thomas Prize, and longlisted for the Orange Prize. As a screenwriter, she adapted The Luminaries for television, and Jane Austen's Emma for feature film. Born in 1985 in Canada and raised in New Zealand, she now lives in Cambridge, England.
Birnam Wood is terrific. As a multilayered, character-driven
thriller, it's as good as it gets. Ruth Rendell would have loved
it. A beautifully textured work-- what a treat
*Stephen King*
Phenomenal and utterly gripping, Birnam Wood has the sense of a
literary writer setting herself free and having a bit of fun. It's
fantastic. I loved it.
*Jessie Burton*
What I admired most in Birnam Wood was the way that the rapid
violence of the climax rises, all of it, out of the deep, patient,
infinitely nuanced character-work that comes before. If George
Eliot had written a thriller, it might have been a bit like
this
*Francis Spufford*
I read this in two deep gulps - it's delicious, it had me
re-reading passages aloud. Catton's storytelling is deft and
irresistible in this merciless whirlpool of a book, which pulls you
inexorably towards its final tragedy
*Kiran Millwood Hargrave*
Birnam Wood is electric: a spectacular book. It has the pace and
bite of a thriller. It has an iron-willed morality. It feels like
the product of astonishing skill, and formidable love. It's
literally, physically breathtaking
*Katherine Rundell*
A filmic and page-turning thriller - Eleanor Catton weaves a
complex and absorbing web of human relationships in which the
balance of power is constantly and unpredictably shifting. Hubris
and ambition, vanity and greed, principle and expediency, courage
and hope - all are here, but not necessarily where you expect to
find them
*Carys Davies*
This is an urgent, compelling read, bleak but deeply moving and
humanly credible. Eleanor Catton offers an unsparing analysis of
the various deadly self-delusions and corruptions that are
generated by our global denial of the planet's crisis - but also by
our naive, confused yearnings to be numbered among the righteous.
It is a book of real moral depth
*Rowan Williams*
Mysterious and marvellously unpredictable, Birnam Wood had me
reading the way I used to as a kid - curiously, desperately and as
if it was the whole world. Catton connects to the natural and
unnatural ways in which we try to control our environments, our
impulses and one another. A spectacular novel, conjured by a
virtuoso
*Rivka Galchen*
A writer of enormous skill, dexterity, charm and thoughtfulness.
Birnam Wood accomplishes something rare and important; in making
the rampage of growth capitalism feel as high stakes it is, and in
making the very next moment, the very next page, feel
consequential.
*Caoilinn Hughes*
A wildly exciting contemporary thriller... You really do read the
last 150 pages of Birnam Wood with your pulse racing and your heart
thumping
*Daily Telegraph*
Enormously readable... Hugely entertaining... [Catton] can write
funny social satire; she can stage a convincingly self-defeating
fight among leftist radicals; she can notice "the hash of oily
streaks and fingerprints" on a locked phone screen
*Guardian*
Part eco-thriller, part satire and it's gripping, thought-provoking
and full of surprises. A brilliant pageturner from a dazzling
writer
*Mail on Sunday*
Catton is a generous writer... Her instinct is to give the reader
more for their money - more plot, more context, more suspense, more
social commentary, more character. Birnam Wood is a novel that
contains multitudes
*Sunday Times*
A fittingly explosive story, mysterious and gripping from start to
finish... This is a deeply enjoyable, action-packed book
*Financial Times*
Thrilling... A mischievous satire... The book's title invites
comparisons with Macbeth and, sure enough, it spirals into a
tragedy of Shakespearean proportions.
*The Times*
A smart, satirical novel... Glorious... Birnam Wood is a dark and
brilliant novel about the violence and tawdriness of late
capitalism. Its ending, though, propels it from a merely very good
book into a truly great one
*Observer*
Birnam Wood is wrapped in the trappings of a thriller. There are
betrayals, deaths, plots, crimes, lust, lies and all the rest. But
it is done gracefully. Catton has taken her time, and it shows
*Spectator*
A biting, satirical thriller... If you want a thoughtful novel to
chew on, Birnam Wood will satisfy you
*Independent*
Birnam Wood is literary fiction with the propulsive pace of a
thriller, a masterful display of omniscient storytelling, a
cautionary tale of friendship soured, a shrewd take on the
environmental activism and the global existentialist threat, and
undoubtedly one of the books of the year
*Irish Times*
This is a cracking read... Catton is a writer with a clear moral
purpose: happy to entertain but even happier when throwing a
well-written, well-aimed punch
*Irish Independent*
Cleverly done
*Daily Mail*
Catton's best book yet... I was gripped, shocked and satisfied by
the finale... The overwhelming takeaway is the sense of having had
an enormous amount of fun... I enjoy a good thriller, and this is
an excellent one
*TLS*
All killer no filler. Grappling elegantly with identity politics
and the culture wars as it goes, it flies along most enjoyably
without a dull moment
*Big Issue*
A thoughtful, personality-rich page-turner
*Vanity Fair*
Dazzling
*I Paper*
A deserving early entrant for book of the year
*Daily Mirror*
Birnam Wood is a rare accomplishment: an intelligent and elegant
thriller that is also a damn fine read
*Economist*
Birnam Wood is a firecracker of a book, bursting with provocative
ideas and crackling dialogue...
*International Express*
A fun, thrilling tale about a guerrilla gardening collective,
featuring evil tech bros, apocalypse bunkers, and some LSD to top
it all off
*Sunday Times*
With realistic characters and a pacey plot, Birnam Wood is a
page-turning literary thriller. It gleefully makes its characters
question their core beliefs, with a hefty side order of sarcasm and
satire to ensure the mood remains just the right side of
nihilistic
*Sunday Business Post*
Exceptionally good... This brilliantly assembled stand-off has
something of the Jonathan Franzen about it...or even Tom Wolfe, in
its leisurely command of powerful big shots vs unpredictable small
fry
*Strong Words*
A brilliant tale of intentions, actions and consequences drawn out
in a stunning setting, it's an unflinching examination of how far
we will go to ensure our own survival
*Firecall*
[An] enjoyable, cleverly paced literary thriller... [Catton is]
able to build her characters superbly, giving them complex inner
lives and, it turns out, morals and motives that come in fifty
shades of grey rather than simply black and white
*Collagerie*
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