What I Loved

ebook / ISBN-13: 9781444719598

Price: £10.99

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LONGLISTED FOR THE WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR FICTION

With an introduction by Megan Nolan

‘Siri Hustvedt’s most ambitious, most rewarding novel. It mesmerises, arouses, disturbs’
Salman Rushdie

‘Defiantly complex and frequently dazzling’
Sunday Times

A big, wide, sensuous novel – clever, sinister, yet attractively real’
Guardian

‘A love story with the grip and suspense of a thriller’
Times Literary Supplement

In 1975 art historian Leo Hertzberg discovers an extraordinary painting in a New York gallery. He buys the work, tracks down the artist, Bill Wechsler, and embarks on a life-long friendship with him.

This is the story of their intense and troubled relationship. Of the women in their lives and their work, of art and love, loss and betrayal – and of their sons, born the same year but whose lives take very different paths.

‘Superb . . . What I Loved is a rare thing, a page turner written at full intellectual stretch, serious but witty, large-minded and morally engaged’
New York Times

Reviews

Breathtaking
James Urquhart, <i> Independent </i>
A love story with the grip and suspense of a thriller. It makes you ponder human existence with a peculiar mixture of stoicism and wonder.
Noonie Minogue, <i> Times Literary Supplement </i>
Defiantly complex and frequently dazzling ... she has created a conceptually exciting work that demands we think, but which still allows us room to feel.
Alex Clark, <i> Sunday Times </i>
Substantial, moving and beautifully written
Christian House, <i> Independent on Sunday </i>
A big, wide, sensuous novel - clever, sinister, yet attractively real
Julie Myerson, <i> Guardian </i>
A consummately intelligent novel, highly literate but also intensely moving.
Jackie McGlone, <i> Scotsman </i>
Riveting ... erudite and immensely detailed ... a rich, densely textured and utterly absorbing novel
Lesley Glaister
Subtle, compassionate, wise, and supremely intelligent, it's a striking achievement.
Kieron Corless, <i> Time Out </i>
Hustvedt ranks amongst the finest American writers working today
Jennifer O'Connell, <i> Sunday Business Post </i>
A powerful novel of love, loss and longing, exquisitely written
Anne Donovan, <i> Sunday Herald </i>
[A] strange, addictive masterpiece . . . I read it in 2003, the year it came out, and haven't stopped thinking about it since
The Times