The new novel from the Pulitzer Prize-winning, Man Booker Prize-shortlisted author: a haunting portrait of a woman, her decisions, her conversations, her solitariness, in a beautiful and lonely Italian city
Jhumpa Lahiri is the author of four works of fiction: Interpreter of Maladies, The Namesake, Unaccustomed Earth, and The Lowland; and a work of non-fiction, In Other Words. She has received numerous awards, including the Pulitzer Prize; the PEN/Hemingway Award; the PEN/Malamud Award; the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award; the Premio Gregor von Rezzori; the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature; a 2014 National Humanities Medal, awarded by President Barack Obama; and the Premio Internazionale Viareggio-Versilia, for In altre parole. Whereabouts is Lahiri’s first novel written in Italian and translated by her into English. www.jhumpalahiri.net
One of the most interesting American writers at work today ...
Whereabouts feels like her answer to Matisse’s cut-outs: she has
taken her writing apart and reconstructed it, sparely, to make
something new, where silence matters … If the antidote to a year of
solitude and trauma is art, then this novel is the answer. It is
superb
*SUNDAY TIMES*
Elegantly done, a portrait veiled in quiet melancholy, but which
still celebrates the unexpected joys of the quotidian, and how much
more sharply you can appreciate them when alone
*THE TIMES*
Insightful, elegant prose exposing the faults that make us
human
*I NEWS*
Addictive … Sometimes we’re in the mood for intimate novels
exploring the intricacies of human emotion … Quietly
mesmerising
*STYLIST*
So timely … Takes daring and to my mind beautiful risks with
structure and plot
*BBC Radio 4 Open Book*
Its sentences are honed to minimalist beauty ... The most exciting
moments of the novel are when it becomes a novel of thinking, when
it dives down into its sharp, provocative fragments
*NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW*
A beautifully poised exploration of an interior life
*DAILY MAIL*
Each chapter an espresso shot of regret and loneliness … This is a
book about belonging and not belonging, place and displacement
*GUARDIAN*
Compelling … Whereabouts feels like a movie … Stylish and
therapeutic
*GUARDIAN*
A quietly bracing work of fiction ... This is arguably Lahiri’s
most beautifully written novel
*THE NATION*
Whereabouts is rendered in short, journal-like fragments so
strongly and rightly voiced that other books sound wrong when you
turn to them
*THE ATLANTIC*
An utterly compelling and contemplative story, infused with a
fascinating character study, whose presence I still can't seem to
shake off.
*STYLIST*
Lahiri writes with subtlety and delicacy
*NPR*
Whereabouts signals a new mode for Lahiri, and a daring
transformation ... It feels true and wise to the core
*LOS ANGELES TIMES*
Slim and bewitching … A modern day flaneuse … The author has a
talent for capturing the everyday
*SPECTATOR*
Evokes fleeting but resonant encounters with Chekhovian efficiency,
making ordinary memories seem profound … Ms Lahiri has taken risks
for her craft, and they have paid off, beautifully
*ECONOMIST*
Lahiri’s prose is magnetic
*MAIL+*
A hypnotic disappearing act ... The book’s peculiar magnetism lies
in its clash of candour and coyness
*OBSERVER*
An unusual literary and linguistic feat … If, in English, Lahiri is
an eye, in Italian, she’s an ear
*NEW YORK TIMES*
Glorious … Written with grace and sensitivity … Magnificent
*INDEPENDENT*
Jhumpa Lahiri’s writing is wonderful in the literal sense: on every
page there is something to take your breath away
*SAINSBURY'S MAGAZINE*
Subtle and stirring ... A fascinating departure in cadence and form
for Lahiri ... The sort of deft hand so few can properly wield: it
evokes the sort of slow thrum of despair and loneliness so few can
manage well.Lahiri is no ordinary writer ... Poetic as she is and
always has been, seemingly innocuous turns of phrase cut to the
core, while descriptions of light and darkness take you aback and
make you swoon. Elegant, beautiful ... Whereabouts will stay with
you longer than you anticipate
*USA TODAY*
A meditative and aching snapshot of a life in suspension ...
Lahiri’s poetic flourishes and spare, conversational prose are on
full display. This beautifully written portrait of a life in
passage captures the hopes, frustrations, and longings of solitude
and remembrance
*PUBLISHERS WEEKLY*
Painterly … exquisitely detailed… [Lahiri’s] language seems to have
been sieved through a fine mesh, each word a gleaming gemstone … An
incisive and captivating evocation of the nature and nexus of place
and self
*BOOKLIST*
Subtle and stirring ... A fascinating departure in cadence and form
for Lahiri. Told in fragments, Whereabouts [is written with] the
sort of deft hand so few can properly wield: it evokes the sort of
slow thrum of despair and loneliness so few can manage well. But
Lahiri is no ordinary writer. There’s a calming sense of comfort
one finds in the solitude experienced by our main character,
largely due to the exactness of Lahiri’s writing. Poetic as she is
and always has been, seemingly innocuous turns of phrase cut to the
core, while descriptions of light and darkness take you aback and
make you swoon. Elegant, beautiful ... Whereabouts will stay with
you longer than you anticipate
*USA TODAY*
Some books leave you with a feeling for which there are no words,
or at least no words in English that you know of. Jhumpa Lahiri’s
Whereabouts is one of those books. The feeling closest to what is
evoked by this beautifully crafted novel is a stroll during the
blue hour on the first warm evening of spring. A jewel of a
book
*BOOKPAGE*
A series of dreamy vignettes, an unconnected shuffle of moments or
mornings of encounters that create a window into the life of an
educated woman and teacher who is happily single... Beautifully
observed and ruminative ...
*SA Weekend*
Not one word is wasted. A total absence of exposition ensures each
microfiction is surgically edited to its barest, most beautiful
bones. And yet there is a warmth here that encourages great
affection for the anonymous narrator. Written with intelligence,
elegance, empathy and hypnotic power, Whereabouts is destined to
become a book of the year.
*IRISH TIMES*
The storyteller in whose hands we can always expect to find the
sacredness of the ordinary and the grace of the mundane constantly
unveiled
*FINANCIAL TIMES Summer Books 2021: Critics' picks*
A novel with radical ambitions … [An] evocation of a life at once
painfully precarious and yet full of small, intensely physical
pleasures
*LONDON REVIEW OF BOOKS*
This is one to read and re-read
*I PAPER, Summer Reading Picks 2021*
Beautiful Italian miniatures, best dipped into when the need for a
few pages of calm reflection is required
*Otago Daily Times*
Fascinating and inspiring ... It’s a calming and exacting narration
of a woman’s slightly odd-angled life alone in a city. I
particularly enjoyed the description of the protagonist slowly
buying all the objects from someone else’s house and placing them
in her own. There could be no better metaphor for learning to live
in a language outside one’s own heritage
*SPECTATOR, Books of the Year*
Pared-down, direct and elegant
*INDEPENDENT, The 20 best books of 2021*
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