The White Hotel

World Fantasy Award, 1982

Paperback / ISBN-13: 9780753809259

Price: £8.99

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The worldwide bestselling, Booker-shortlisted modern classic

Now a BBC radio play starring Anne-Marie Duff and Bill Paterson, dramatised by Dennis Potter.

‘Spine-tingling… heart-stunning’ New York Times

‘A novel of blazing imaginative and intellectual force’ Salman Rushdie


‘This novel is a reminder that fiction can amaze’ Time

‘Precise, troubling, brilliant’ Observer

Shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, The White Hotel is a modern classic of searing eroticism and sensuality set against the broad sweep of twentieth-century history.

It is a dream of electrifying eroticism and inexplicable violence, recounted by a young woman to her analyst, Sigmund Freud. It is a horrifying yet restrained narrative of the Holocaust. It is a searing vision of the wounds of our century and an attempt to heal them. Interweaving poetry and case history, fantasy and historical truth-telling, The White Hotel is a modern classic of enduring emotional power that attempts nothing less than to reconcile the notion of individual destiny with that of historical fate.

‘A remarkable and original novel . . . there is no novel to my knowledge which resembles this in technique or ideas. It stands alone’ Graham Greene

‘Astonishing . . . A forthright sensuality mixed with a fine historical feeling for the nightmare moments in modern history, a dreamlike fluidity and quickness’ John Updike

‘A dazzler that lingers in the mind’ People

Reviews

This novel is a reminder that fiction can amaze
Time
A dazzler that lingers in the mind
People
A novel of blazing imaginative and intellectual force
Salman Rushdie
Astonishing ... A forthright sensuality mixed with a fine historical feeling for the nightmare moments in modern history, a dreamlike fluidity and quickness
John Updike
A remarkable and original novel ... there is no novel to my knowledge which resembles this in technique or ideas. It stands alone
Graham Greene
Precise, troubling, brilliant
Observer
To describe this novel as spine-tingling in its indescribable poetic effect would be to trivialize its profoundly tragic theme. Say then that it is heart-stunning
The New York Times