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Gregory Norminton is the author of five novels, two collections of short stories and a book of aphorism. He teaches creative writing at Manchester Metropolitan University and lives in Sheffield.
‘Brilliant. The best treatment of climate change in fiction I've
come across. A powerful, essential novel’ George Monbiot ‘In
satisfyingly Alan Garneresque fashion, the cycle of stories –
historical, contemporary and science fictional – implies a single
underlying narrative of landscape; human behaviour echoes from time
frame to time frame, through the same cautious liaisons and
breakages of trust, the same muddles of love and prejudice, the
same sense of family as central to survival’ Guardian ‘A fierce,
immersive vision of a novel. Wise, humane but never sentimental,
The Devil's Highway is a story of love, rebellion, trauma and
survival. It is the story of our relationship with the natural
world – of how we got here, and where we might go next. No story
could be more important’ Tom Bullough, author of Addlands ‘The
Devils Highway is profound and powerful, its prose moving to
poetry. Gregory Norminton writes in language scraped down to its
bleached bones – but how exquisitely he makes those bones sing’ TLS
‘Norminton cleverly shows how the places generations pass through
have a way of preserving their ghosts’ Sunday Times ‘This is a work
of staggering imagination, of unflinching acuity, powerful, poetic
and profound. Telling the story of climate breakdown through
language breakdown, it magnifies the meaning of loss, portraying a
devastated culture without history or literature, whose language is
down to its bleached bones and yet – how those bones sing’ Jay
Griffiths, author of Wild: An Elemental Journey ‘A striking and
dazzlingly poetic meditation on the resonance of place, conflict
and kinship. . . . Norminton's skilfully-wrought novel is a
memorable and thought-provoking read’
Liz Jensen, author of The Rapture ‘A big, ambitious, beautifully
written book that examines, with immense sympathy and generosity,
one of the greatest of all themes, place, and our complex, fraught
relationship with it’ Neel Mukherjee, author of The Lives of Others
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