Alice Winn lives in Brooklyn, where she writes screenplays. She grew up in Paris and was educated in British boarding schools. She has a degree in English Literature from Oxford University. IN MEMORIAM is her debut novel.
It's hard to believe that In Memoriam is a debut novel as it's so
assured, affecting and moving. Alice Winn has written a devastating
love story between two young men that moves from the sheltered
idyll of their public school to the unspeakable horrors of the
Western Front during the First World War. Gaunt and Ellwood will
live in your mind long after you've closed the final pages.
*Maggie O'Farrell*
One of the best debuts I've read in recent years: immersive,
rousing, tender and devastating. In Memoriam is both a deeply
moving love story and a visceral evocation of the Great War,
impressively free of cliche. Winn makes such important points about
class, destruction and the loss of innocence. I loved it with a
startling ferocity
*Elizabeth Day*
An instant classic
*Sara Collins*
A tender, affecting debut . . . Winn strikingly evokes the torment
and brutality of life of the front
*The Times*
If you haven't read it, you're missing out
*Bonnie Garmus*
A vivid rendering of love and frontline brutality in the first
world war . . . In Memoriam is at once epic and intimate, humorous
and profound, a vivid rendering of the madness and legacy of the
first world war as seen through the lens of a schoolboy love affair
. . . Acts of revenge, moonlit escapes from POW camps,
serendipities just wild enough to be credible - all bound from the
page with a clarity best described as cinematic, while even in the
direst moments Winn's dialogue thrums with mirth and furious
intelligence. Throughout, she artfully switches perspectives and
settings, leaving the reader in desperate suspense over fates and
fortunes.
*Observer*
In Memoriam is the story of a great tragedy, but it is also a
moving portrait of young love, and there is often a lightness to
the book, even humor. It's a difficult balancing act, but one that
Winn, who is erudite, fast talking and very funny, pulls off . . .
Winn was 26 years old when she began it, but "In Memoriam" doesn't
read like its author was still finding her footing as a writer
*New York Times*
Alice Winn's propulsive, visceral and heartrending debut takes an
all-too-familiar setting and brilliantly reframes it via a feverish
gay love story . . . Winn skillfully uses the school as a
microcosm, making us feel the loss of each boy, each friend, each
brother . . . but what keeps you turning the page is the tender
central romance . . . I can't remember the last time I was this
invested in a love story - all the while seeing our darkest history
brought wrenchingly to life
*Sunday Telegraph, 4 stars*
Alice Winn's devastating debut will smash your heart to smithereens
. . . as thousands of young men die in the most horrific of ways,
Gaunt and Ellwood attempt to survive the slaughter and keep their
love alive
*Daily Mail*
First love, class, male camaraderie and the horrors of the war are
all explored in this quietly heartbreaking epic with the
unforgettable appeal of Birdsong
*Good Housekeeping, A Book of the Month*
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