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- | LITERARY FICTION The Romantic by William Boyd (Viking £20, 464 pp)<br>The Romantic <br><br>Boyd's new novel revisits the ‘whole life' formula of his 2002 hit Any Human Heart, which followed its hero across the 20th century.<br>The Romantic does the same thing for the 19th century. It opens with the kind of tongue-in-cheek framing device Boyd loves, as it explains how the author came into the possession of the papers of a long-dead Irishman, Cashel Greville Ross.<br>What follows is Boyd's attempt to tell his life story, as Cashel — a jack of all trades — zig-zags madly between four continents trying his luck as a soldier, an explorer, a farmer and a smuggler.<br>Behind the roving is the ache of a rash decision to ditch his true love, Raphaella, a noblewoman he falls for while in Italy.<br>There's a philosophical point here, sure: | + | LITERARY FICTION The Romantic by William Boyd (Viking £20, 464 pp)<br>The Romantic <br><br>Boyd's new novel revisits the ‘whole life' formula of his 2002 hit Any Human Heart, which followed its hero across the 20th century.<br>The Romantic does the same thing for the 19th century. Should you have just about any queries concerning in which in addition to how you can make use of [https://www.wiklundkurucuk.com/Lawyer-istanbul-Turkey-es Lawyer Law Firm Turkish], Turkey [https://www.wiklundkurucuk.com/Lawyer-istanbul-cn Lawyer Law Firm Turkey istanbul] Law Firm you can e mail us at our own web-page. It opens with the kind of tongue-in-cheek framing device Boyd loves, as it explains how the author came into the possession of the papers of a long-dead Irishman, Cashel Greville Ross.<br>What follows is Boyd's attempt to tell his life story, as Cashel — a jack of all trades — zig-zags madly between four continents trying his luck as a soldier, an explorer, a farmer and a smuggler.<br>Behind the roving is the ache of a rash decision to ditch his true love, Raphaella, a noblewoman he falls for while in Italy.<br>There's a philosophical point here, sure: no single account of Cashel's life — or any life — can be adequate. More importantly, though, Boyd's pile-up of set-piece escapades just offers a huge amount of fun.<br> Nights of plague by Orhan Pamuk (Faber £20, 704 pp)<br>Nights of plague <br><br>The latest historical epic from Pamuk takes place in 1901 on the plague-struck Aegean island of Mingheria, part of the Ottoman Empire.<br>When a Turkish royal comes ashore as part of a delegation with her husband, a quarantine doctor tasked with enforcing public health measures, the stage is set for a slow-burn drama about the effect of lockdown on an island already tense with ethnic and sectarian division.<br>There's murder mystery, too, when another doctor is found dead. And the whole thing comes wrapped in a cute conceit: purportedly inspired by a cache of letters, the novel presents itself as a 21st-century editorial project that got out of hand — an author's note even apologises upfront for the creaky plot and meandering digressions.<br>Pamuk gives himself more leeway than many readers might be willing to afford, yet this is the most distinctive pandemic novel yet — even if, rather spookily, he began it four years before the advent of Covid. <br> RELATED ARTICLES Share this ar<br><br><br><br><br><br>DM.later('bundle', function()<br>DM.has('external-source-links', [https://grypz.de/klasse/9/index.php?title=Benutzer:AlfieManzo Lawyer Law Firm Turkish] 'externalLinkTracker');<br>); |