<b>Tender, restrained</b>, <i>Hide </i>is the <b>freshly imagined</b> story of a gay male couple who decide to give up the world –friends, family, career – in order to live out their forbidden love in the decades before gay liberation. This is <b>a great love story</b>
Edmund White, author of A Boy's Own Story
<b>Graceful and understated</b>
New York Times Book Review
Past and present intercut in this <b>tender, exquisitely observed love story </b>that demonstrates the sacrifices made in the name of commitment
Fanny Blake, Daily Mail
One of the <b>best debut novels</b> we’ve had the pleasure to read this year … A <b>profoundly compassionate</b> book about how we administer to those we love, the tender acrimony of intimacy and facing loss in a world dominated by threat. The story is <b>understated, poignant, beautifully observed</b> and lingers with you long after you’ve reluctantly read the final page
Attitude
An <b>extraordinary</b>, subtle, unsettling book. It’s a <b>daring, searching, powerful</b> piece of work. He never puts a foot wrong. Those two men, their histories, their difference and the passion that held them loom off the page … I admired the relentless power of this writing ... <b>Ferocious, unsentimental and masterful</b>
Patricia Duncker, author of Hallucinating Foucault
A <b>tough</b>, <b>thoughtful </b>story beautifully told
Eithne Farry, Sunday Express
A <b>masterful </b>novel. Every page <b>aches with life</b>
Gail Godwin, author of The Good Husband
Reading Matthew Griffin’s <i>Hide</i>, I kept saying to myself 'at last!': a novel that follows the trajectory of a marriage (in fact if not in name) between two men over the course of decades, and does so with <b>grit, humour and compassion</b>! <i>Hide</i> is a <b>welcome </b>and <b>important </b>work
David Leavitt, author of The Two Hotel Francforts
Tough but <b>compassionate and beautifully observed</b>, Matthew Griffin's debut novel is an <b>unflinching </b>look at the cost of isolation in an intolerant society and a <b>moving </b>story about the persistence of love
Maggie Shipstead, author of Seating Arrangements
A <b>profound </b>and <b>complex </b>achievement ... <i>Hide</i> <b>renews one’s faith in the future of gay fiction</b>
Gregory Woods, author of Homintern
<b>Deeply touching</b> and thought provoking
Scotsman
A <b>fascinating </b>and <b>raw </b>journey
Herald
A <b>remarkable </b>novel
Western Mail
An intimate examination of the consequences of love lived in secrecy … <b>An important story to tell</b>, as the voices of elderly lesbian and gay characters are so rarely heard
Big Issue
This is the rare thing: an <b>important, funny, beautifully observed novel about love</b>. A great debut
Stuart Nadler, author of Wise Men
Some love, pressurized by time, and isolation, and prejudice, turns hard, gem-like, buried in protective rock. In <i>Hide</i>, Matthew Griffin has used his considerable talents to cut into and polish the gemstone, allowing us a glimpse at a <b>remarkable </b>love, a costly love, <b>meanly sparkling, and precious</b>
Justin Torres, author of We the Animals
<i>Hide</i> is the best debut I've read in years. Not only is it <b>beautifully written, full of humor and heart</b>, but it's that rare literary beast: <b>a serious novel that's a joy to read.</b> Matthew Griffin is an important and welcome new <b>voice of his generation</b>
John McNally, author of After the Workshop
<b>A small miracle</b>: a bittersweet portrait of love in the shadows
Booklist
Each chapter holds <b>a thousand tiny truths</b>, not just what it is to be in a relationship, or to be gay, but what it is to simply negotiate life. <b>Masterfully written</b> ... <b>Spread the word</b>
Gay Community News
WINNNER OF THE CROOK'S CORNER BOOK PRIZE 2016
'This is a great love story' Edmund White, author of A Boy's Own Story
Wendell Wilson, a taxidermist, and Frank Clifton, a veteran, meet after the Second World War. But, in this declining textile town in a southern US state, their love holds real danger. Severing nearly all ties with the rest of the world, they carve out a home for themselves on the outskirts of town. For decades, their routine of self-reliant domesticity – Wendell's cooking, Frank’s care for a yard no one sees, and the vicarious drama of courtroom TV – seems to protect them.
But when Wendell finds Frank lying motionless outside at the age of eighty-three, their carefully crafted life together begins to unravel. As Frank’s memory and physical strength deteriorate, Wendell struggles in vain to hold on to the man he once knew. Faced with giving care beyond his capacity, he must come to terms with the consequences of half a century in seclusion: the different lives they might have lived – and the impending, inexorable loss of the one they had.
WINNNER OF THE CROOK'S CORNER BOOK PRIZE 2016
'This is a great love story' Edmund White, author of A Boy's Own Story
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Matthew Griffin is a graduate of Wake Forest University and the Iowa Writers' Workshop. He was born and raised in North Carolina and currently lives with his husband in Louisiana, where he is a visiting professor at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. This is his first novel.
matthewgriffinwriter.com
@mattygrif