The New Life

(Author)
Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Product Details
Price
$28.00  $26.04
Publisher
Scribner Book Company
Publish Date
Pages
400
Dimensions
6.37 X 9.28 X 1.21 inches | 1.2 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781668000830

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About the Author
Tom Crewe was born in Middlesbrough in 1989. He has a PhD in 19th-century British history from the University of Cambridge. Since 2015, he has been an editor at the London Review of Books, to which he has contributed more than thirty essays on politics, art, history, and fiction. The New Life is his first novel.
Reviews
"The New Life is filled with nuance and tenderness, steeped in the atmosphere of late nineteenth century London, a world on the brink of social and sexual change. Tom Crewe's brilliant novel dramatizes the relationship between the visionary and the brave, charting the lives of men and women who inspired not only political progress but an entire new way of living and loving."
--Colm Tóibín, author of Brooklyn and The Magician
"Some of the best writing on desire I've read."
--Douglas Stuart, author of Shuggie Bain and Young Mungo

"Electrifying. Tom Crewe's forensic love of the physical puts the body back into history and makes the past a living, changing place."
--Anne Enright, author of Actress and The Green Road

"A very fine new writer."
--Kate Atkinson, author of Life after Life and Shrines of Gaiety
One of Granta's Best Young Novelists
Winner of the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction

"This debut novel reimagines the real-life efforts of two researchers who advocated for acceptance of homosexuality in the 1800s, decades before the gay rights movement. In exploring their story, Crewe asks: What's worth jeopardizing in the name of progress?"
--The New York Times Book Review, Editor's Choice

"In The New Life, Crewe distinguishes himself both as novelist and as historian... He has, more unusually, found a prose that can accommodate everything from the lofty to the romantic and the shamelessly sexy."
--The New Yorker

"Rothian...a tour de force of writing"
--The New York Review of Books

"Intricate and finely crafted... [Crewe] attentively constructs rich, human motivations and contradictions for his fictionalized renderings of John and Henry... The New Life brims with intelligence and insight, impressed with all the texture (and fog) of fin de siècle London."
--The New York Times

"The spirit of Forster broods over Tom Crewe's lyrical, piercing debut, The New Life, which lends a contemporary urgency to an exploration of same-sex intimacy and social opprobrium... The New Life is a fine-cut gem, its sentences buffed to a gleam, but with troubling implications for our own reactionary era."
--The Washington Post

"A literary debut that's nothing less than remarkable... Crewe's writing is subtly intricate, gorgeous, though never precious or showy ... at times, it calls to mind the best of Thomas Hardy, but with necessarily modern sensibilities... This is a beautiful, brave book that reminds us of the terrible human cost of bigotry; this is a novel against forgetting."
--The Boston Globe

"One of the most embodied historical novels I have read ... Crewe's brilliance - in addition to his ability to make us feel the physical sensations - is in dramatising moral dilemmas with complexity and rigour ... Lives and experience demand richer forms of storytelling, and this is just what Crewe has given us."
--The Guardian

"A novel that promises to scrape back the polished veneer of late 19th-century England."
--Daily Mail

"Tom Crewe's book is a beautiful, haunting portrait of love in a time that didn't understand it, and a reminder of how close we are to the past."
--Town & Country, 30 Must-Read Books for Winter 2023
"[An] auspicious debut... Crewe uses meticulously researched period details to great effect, and rounds out the narrative with solid characters and tight pacing. Readers will look forward to seeing what this talented author does next."
--Publishers Weekly

"A deft melding of the personal and the political, written in prose that shines."
--Kirkus Review