An epic novel combining fiction and history in a collaboration that encompasses fifty years of American history.
Don DeLillo is the author of many bestselling novels, including Point Omega, Falling Man, White Noise, Libra, and Zero K, and has won many honours in America and abroad, including the National Book Award, the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, the Jerusalem Prize for his complete body of work and the William Dean Howells Medal from the American Academy of Arts and Letters for his novel Underworld. In 2010, he received the PEN/Saul Bellow Award. He has also written several plays.
A literary colossus, equal to any (and surpassing most) of the
vaulting novels which strive for the immensity of the American
mythic.
*The Sunday Telegraph*
A rousingly impressive achievement in almost every novelistic
department - dialogue, structure, timing, precise description,
heartfelt veracity and the rest.
*Observer*
Every decade or so the real thing comes along - a work of
literature so overwhelmingly good that you know it is a masterpiece
which will endure . . . huge sections sweep you along in a way that
only the greatest books can.
*Daily Telegraph*
His longest, most ambitious, and most complicated novel - and his
best . . . Underworld is the black comedy of the Cold War; it is
full of sentences that capture, with the choice of the odd word, a
moment in American history.
*New Yorker*
Astonishing . . . an amazing performance . . . Mr DeLillo's most
affecting novel yet . . . This bravura master of cerebral
pyrotechnics also knows how to seize and rattle our emotions . . .
In this remarkable novel, [DeLillo] has taken the effluvia of
modern society, all the detritus of our daily and political lives,
and turned it into a dazzling, phosphorescent work of art.
*The New York Times*
Don DeLillo's latest epic, Underworld, brilliantly interweaves
voices, incidents and telling details into a moving, empowering
people's history. If Libra, White Noise and Mao II hadn't already
done enough to persuade British readers that DeLillo ranks with the
best of contemporary American novelists, Underworld surely
will.
*Independent on Sunday*
DeLillo suddenly fills the sky. Underworld renders DeLillo a great
novelist . . . [it] surges with magisterial confidence through time
(the last half-century) and through space (Harlem, Phoenix,
Vietnam, Kazakhstan, Texas, the Bronx) . . . It isn't every day, or
even every decade, that one sees the ascension of a great
writer.
*Esquire*
Among other things, the new novel from Don DeLillo is a remarkable
feat of engineering . . . he chisels and carves until he has made
something that cannot help but lift your heart: a cathedral of
prose . . . He has built a towering structure and I recommend you
climb to the top. The view is sensational.
*Evening Standard*
With Underworld, DeLillo confirms himself in the select group of
great American writers truly equal to the temper of very strange
times.
*Times Literary Supplement*
Underworld is nothing less than the story of the States in the Cold
War; an epic to set alongside Moby Dick or Augie March.
*Observer*
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