Product Details
Waterland

Waterland
By Graham Swift

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Product Description

Tom Crick, a history teacher in the Fenlands, is driven by a marital crisis and the provocation of one of his pupils, to forsake his teaching and relate the story of his family who have lived in the Fens since the 18th century. Graham Swift won the 1996 Booker Prize for Fiction for "Last Orders".


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #52087 in Books
  • Published on: 1996-11
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 368 pages

Editorial Reviews

Independent
'Swift's 1983 masterpiece - a wonderfully rich novel that, as this 25th anniversary edition shows, has weathered the passing years.'


Customer Reviews

A mesmerising river of a novel.5
This novel flows like a river through time and space, taking history and misfortune as its central themes. Told from the perspective of a London-based history teacher at the end of his school career, the narrator takes us (and his class of pupils) back to the lost Fenland of his youth, to revisit the past in an effort to understand what is happening to him in the present. As a meditation on history and the historical process, it is second to none. As a meditation on place - including London, where, after all, the memories crowd in - it is a worthy inheritor of the likes of Thomas Hardy, John Cowper Powys and Ronald Blyth (of Akenfield fame); and the description of the launch of Coronation Ale (which is surely based on Adnams' deadly Broadside; or maybe even Green King's IPA) is one of the best accounts of mass drunkenness in all literature.

Re-writing the Fens4
Swift paints a landscape that breathes history and and also critiques its validity. The Fens are brought to life before us in a moving and impressive manner. Although at first it took me a while to engage with the characters, I soon became engrossed in the narrative and couldn't put the book down! Anyone that has ever driven or taken a train through the dreary, isolated Fens will appreciate this novel: anyone who hasn't will want to visit this unique land and see it for themselves. A truly great read and worth your time.

Brilliantly evocative5
Last Orders won the Booker and is a brilliant read but, nevertheless, Waterland is my favourite of Swift's books.
It's one of the best novels I have ever read for evoking a sense of place and for tying the characters and their actions in with that place. In Swift's hands the flat watery fens become a place of mystery and beauty - the people who live there take on a phlegmatic character.
The descriptions are masterful and haunt you for a long time after reading them, the prose is majestic and a sesual pleasure to read. The plot's gripping too - real human drama. I can't recommend this one enough.