The Outcast
|
| List Price: | £12.99 |
| Price: | £8.01 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £15. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
36 new or used available from £6.25
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #4679 in Books
- Published on: 2008-02-07
- Binding: Hardcover
- 352 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk
About the Author ~ Sadie Jones
Sadie Jones was born in London. She grew up in a creative environment: her father is the Jamaican poet and screenwriter Evan Jones, and her mother was an actress. As her friends took up their various university places, Sadie worked in a variety of jobs. After travelling, she settled in London and spent several years as a screenwriter, before writing her first novel,
Exclusive Amazon.co.uk Interview with Sadie Jones
What is
What inspired you to write it?
The idea of a boy coming out of prison and trying to fit into a community that is itself corrupt was the first thing that came to me. I wanted to write an Oedipal story, with iconic characters, about what the nature of what it is to belong, and injustice. I set it in the fifties because I have always been very attracted to the books and films of that time.
Who are your literary influences?
It's difficult to think in terms of being influenced, because when you write you try to find your own voice and forget those of other writers, but I must in some way be a product of books I've loved. My favourite writers are Hemingway, Capote, Salinger, McEwan and Dostoyevsky.
If you could recommend just one "must-read book" to anyone, what would it be and why?
It would be
What top tips do you have for anyone looking to write their first book?
It's very hard; I only know what works for me, which is planning, structure and hard work. I have found that whenever I write thinking I'll sort some lingering doubt out later, I generally run into trouble. If you can't answer every single question about your story, then people will be able to tell. Also, try not to get too tied up in whether or not it's any good, or what will happen to it when it's finished - all of that can be paralysing.
Reviews for The Outcast
An assured voice, a riveting story, and an odd, wrenchingly sympathetic protagonist. I would never have imagined this was a first novel. Lionel Shriver
In the tradition of ATONEMENT and REMAINS OF THE DAY but in her own singularly arresting voice, Sadie Jones conjures up the straight-laced, church-going, secretly abusive middle class of 1950s England.
I much admired
Sadie Jones is an important new voice. She writes in beautiful prose of terrible events, demonstrating how love denied brings brutal consequences. She conjures the repressive social climate of the 1950s with awful accuracy, and explores the hearts and minds of young people with forensic skill. A great stylist and fine storyteller. Joan Bakewell
One of Radio 4's Book at Bedtime reads for February, Jones' story is imbued with brooding atmosphere and drama. Understated and elegantly narrated with attention to period detail, this is a gripping love story with a twist. If you liked Atonement by Ian McEwan, you'll love this. Harper's Bazaar (Feb issue)
A wonderfully assured first novel. Guardian
The prose is elegant and spare, but the story it reveals is raw and explosive Devastatingly good. Daily Mail
Set in post WWII suburban London, this superb debut novel charts the downward spiral and tortured redemption of a young man shattered by loss. The war is over, and Lewis Aldridge is getting used to having his father, Gilbert, back in the house. Things hum along splendidly until Lewis's mother drowns, casting the 10-year-old into deep isolation Jones's prose is fluid, and Lewis's suffering comes across as achingly real. Publishers Weekly
A confident, suspenseful and affecting first novel, delivered in cool, precise, distinctive prose. Kirkus
Review
Sadie Jones is an important new voice. She writes in beautiful prose of terrible events, demonstrating how love denied brings brutal consequences. She conjures the repressive social climate of the 1950s with awful accuracy, and explores the hearts and minds of young people with forensic skill. A great stylist and fine storyteller. --Joan Bakewell
Sunday Times
`elegantly written debut novel brings to life both her alienated, damaged protagonist and the small minded community that condemns him'
Customer Reviews
LIFE CAN BE CRAP !
I can relate to lewis. my childhood wasn,t easy as you didn,t know who to turn to and thinking everybody is against you . I love this book . Sadie Jones ,well done and i hope you write more good books in the future .
Amazing debut
Sadie Jones's moving story of young Lewis's struggle with the emotional crippling delivered by family events and (quoting another review) "communal failure to take responsibility for a troubled child" is both absorbing and beautifully written, without any sentimentality. I was a child in the 1950s, it's hard to believe that Sadie Jones wasn't there as well! Her evocation of the period is admirable and inaccuracies of detail are minimal (eg British police cars had bells not sirens, and a girl would have worn stretch slacks not jeans) and certainly don't detract. The parallel and horrifying portrayal of the Carmichael family is entwined with that of Lewis to such an degree that the reader alternately hopes for and dreads the resolution of Lewis and Kit's love story. I read this avidly in two consecutive days and hope the next Sadie Jones novel is already well on its way to us.
Breathtaking! Most moving and impressive new novel I've read for a long time!
This is a superb novel, worthy of all the accolades it has received. Not just a page turner, but also a deeply moving story of pain and redemption--and an unusual love story. The sense of period is deftly realised too---with all the hypocrisies and inhibitions of post-War middle England. The style is also engaging --it seems to me that the deceptively simple language and the 'oddities' of syntax that another reviewer has objected to on this site are deliberate---the reader is placed, for much of the time, within the mind of the 'outcast', the person who is dislocated both from himself and society, and thus the style reflects that.
The ending is deeply satisfying, and I can forgive the one little tilt into melodrama towards the end.
Kit and Lewis will remain in my mind for a long time to come.
For me, this book is up there with 'Atonement' and 'The Go-Between' and infinitely superior to Anne Enright's recent ghastly Booker Prize winning novel!




