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Présentation Joy Format Broché
- Livre Littérature Générale
Résumé :
In a sparkling glass office in London's Square Mile - a place bursting with flirtations, water-cooler confrontations and dangerous amounts of abject boredom - talented young lawyer Joy Stephens falls forty feet onto a marble floor. In the shadow of this event, the lives of those closest to her begin to collide and change in unexpected ways.
Biographie:
Jonathan Lee's first novel, Who is Mr Satoshi?, was nominated for the Desmond Elliott Prize and shortlisted for an MJA Open Book Award in 2011. His second novel, Joy, published in 2013, was shortlisted for the Encore Award. He lives in New York....
Sommaire:
In a sparkling glass office in London's Square Mile - a place bursting with flirtations water-cooler confrontations and dangerous amounts of abject boredom - talented young lawyer Joy Stephens falls forty feet onto a marble floor. In the shadow of this baffling event the lives of those closest to her begin to collide and change in unexpected ways......
A black comedy of exuberance and bite . original, and brilliantly executed; the characters' voices . ventriloquised with flair . This is the wittiest, most addictive piece of literary yuppie-bashing since Martin Amis's Money. Lee is a writer to keep an eye on. Independent A major new voice in British fiction. Guardian A brilliant book... Jonathan Lee is one of those rare, agile writers who can take your breath away. -- Catherine O'Flynn, author of What Was Lost [Joy] displays a real flair for narrative and characterisation.Highly accomplished.The closest comparison that can be made is with Joshua Ferris's Then We Came to the End, which shares a similarly bravura command of narrative voice.Exquisitely and surprisingly written.it proves that Lee is a significant talent and that his future work should be well worth awaiting. Observer Lee's writing is witty and engaging, containing something of the wearied disgust of Raymond Chandler's prose.These four voices confiding in the counsellor are entertainingly distinct.The novel's outstanding achievement, however, is the central, spiralling narrative that Jonathan Lee threads among these personal accounts: the intimate story of how Joy came to fall, a forensic portrayal of despair that shows Lee to be an exceptional, brave prose stylist. The dark revelations in the book's final pages are disturbing while not gratuitous, but Lee also allows some credible room for optimism among these cluttered lives. Funny and humane, Joy is an enormously impressive piece of storytelling -- Tom Williams Literary Review
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