She makes us read on, our hearts in our mouths, to see how a twice-told story will turn out this time

Publishers Weekly

The intricacy with which Winterson has plotted her novel against each Shakespearean detail will delight readers familiar with the original … it’s part of a vision of a world in which past, present, and future are lived simultaneously, original and adaptation existing in the same moment.

The Times

<b>A book of considerable beauty</b>… Winterson’s fiction is a fine invitation into this deeply Shakespearean vision of imagination as the best kind of truth-telling

- Rowan Williams, New Statesman

See all

Winterson’s stage, like that of Shakespeare, is filled with wonders

- Frances Wilson, Times Literary Supplement

Winterson is faithful to both the narrative and the spirit of the play, while transposing it to an utterly different and modern setting… <b>There is lightness here, in the frisky prose and the author’s delight in invention, but you are never free of the awareness of dark shadows where danger and corruption lie in wait.</b>

- Allan Massie, Scotsman

<b>Clever and beautiful...it soars</b>

Financial Times

A <b>deeply felt, emotionally intelligent and serious</b> novel, which resists easy answers and yet expresses the hope that human beings can muddle through, and that bad pasts can have good outcomes... <b>Pulsates with such authenticity and imaginative generosity that I defy you not to engage with it.</b>

- Andrew Dickson, Independent

<i>The Winter’s Tale, </i>one of the late, 'problem' plays, is about loss, remorse and forgiveness, and the nature of time. Winterson has captured all this with respect and affection for Shakespeare’s text, and made it new with her own bold and poetic prose and her insights into love and grief. There are passages here so concisely beautiful they give you goosebumps.

- Lucasta Miller, Radar

<b>Emotionally wrought and profoundly intelligent it will pull you into its troubled, wise world of jealousy, paranoia, grief, revenge and forgiveness in some of the most stunning prose you’ll read this year</b> … Winterson masterfully interweaves layers of narrative and themes so that reading the novel is like listening to a Bach prelude and fugue … <b>A supremely clever, compelling and emotionally affecting novel that deserves multiple readings to appreciate its many layers.</b>

- Hannah Beckerman, Mail on Sunday

Engrossing, almost soapily addictive

Independent

‘A shining delight of a novel’
New York Times

'Clever and beautiful...it soars'
Financial Times

A baby girl is abandoned, banished from London to the storm-ravaged American city of New Bohemia. Her father has been driven mad by jealousy, her mother to exile by grief.

Seventeen years later, Perdita doesn't know a lot about who she is or where she's come from - but she's about to find out.

Jeanette Winterson’s cover version of The Winter’s Tale vibrates with echoes of Shakespeare's original and tells a story of hearts broken and hearts healed, a story of revenge and forgiveness, a story that shows that whatever is lost shall be found.

‘Emotionally wrought and profoundly intelligent... A supremely clever, compelling and emotionally affecting novel that deserves multiple readings to appreciate its many layers’
Mail on Sunday

'There are passages here so concisely beautiful they give you goosebumps'
Observer

'Pulsates with such authenticity and imaginative generosity that I defy you not to engage with it'
Independent

Read more


Jeanette Winterson’s cover version of The Winter’s Tale vibrates with echoes of Shakespeare's original and tells a story of hearts broken and hearts healed, a story of revenge and forgiveness, a story that shows that whatever is lost shall be found.

‘Emotionally wrought and profoundly intelligent...
Read more
A story of love and jealousy, tragedy and forgiveness, a lost child and a found family

Product details

ISBN
9780099598190
Published
2016
Publisher
Vintage Publishing; Vintage
Weight
229 gr
Height
198 mm
Width
130 mm
Thickness
19 mm
Age
01, G, 01
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Biographical note

Jeanette Winterson CBE was born in Manchester. She published her first novel, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, at twenty-five. Over two decades later she revisited that material in her internationally bestselling memoir Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?. Winterson has written thirteen novels for adults and two previous collections of short stories, as well as children's books, non-fiction and screenplays. She is Professor of New Writing at the University of Manchester. She lives in the Cotswolds in a wood and in Spitalfields, London.