<i>Stranger Than Fiction</i> is <b>a masterclass in masterpieces.</b> There hasn’t been a better work of historicist criticism since Robert Hughes’s 1980 book <i>The Shock of the New</i>
Sunday Telegraph
<b>Essential for anyone who loves novels,</b> this book examines how writers translated the seismic and bloody 20th century into memorable fiction
Economist, *Books of the Year*
<b>This is the most engaging imagining of the progress of the 20th-century novel you will read…</b> Frank writes as an enthusiast…always alive to the stories he is telling and the arguments he makes
Observer
<i>Stranger Than Fiction</i>’s lasting achievement is to show how the 20th-century novel — that sprawling, capacious, international form —<b> still informs not just how we read and write, but how we live</b>
Financial Times
A DeLorean time machine, put together by a benevolent mad scientist, a professor offering a luxury seminar for a bargain-basement price . . . <b>A passion project</b>, not a syllabus
New York Times
<b><i>Stranger Than Fiction</i> is testimony to its author’s sheer appetite for books… </b>Frank describes his own modern canon, and, refreshingly, without worrying about what the academics might think
New Statesman
In [Frank's] view, the twentieth-century novel is a distinct literary genre, and his book is an <b>ambitious, intelligent and happily unpretentious</b> effort to map it
New Yorker
<b>My favourite non-fiction book this year</b> — and an excellent antidote to brain rot — is Edwin Frank’s <i>Stranger than Fiction</i>…it’s both a way to exercise deep reading and <b>a portal for re-engaging with some of the greatest works in history</b>
- Mia Levitin, Financial Times
'Edwin Frank has <b>a brilliant and original mind</b>, and <i>Stranger than Fiction</i> is the culmination of a lifetime’s worth of reading and thinking at the highest level'
- Jeffrey Eugenides,
Edwin Frank’s <b>masterly account of the novel </b>gone modern and the modern gone global is a critical history of the last literary century. <b>Epic</b>, <b>personal</b>, <b>smart</b>, <b>wise</b>, <b>witty</b>
- Joshua Cohen,
Living as we do in a world where book culture is on the decline, <i>Stranger Than Fiction</i> comes as <b>a comfort, a solace and a revelation</b>: a wealth of <b>remarkable writing about even more remarkable writing</b>
- Vivian Gornick,
<i>Stranger than Fiction</i> <b>sizzles with passion</b> as it tracks the contortions of a volatile form in a volatile time
- Tom McCarthy,
At once <b>erudite and entertaining</b>, Edwin Frank's <i>Stranger than Fiction</i> is <b>a pleasure and an inspiration</b>, a call to read or reread the novels – the masterpieces – he discusses and to see them through the lens provided by his fascinating biographical information and brilliant literary insights
- Francine Prose,
This gallery of portraits – or collective biography – of the life and times of the twentieth-century novel <b>recovers the lost pleasures of literary criticism</b>: <b>interesting on every page</b>, enamoured with the books as themselves, jargon-free and full of things one doesn’t know and observations one has never made
- Eliot Weinberger,
If reading is an art that risks being lost, then <b><i>Stranger than </i><i>Fiction</i> reminds us of its indispensability</b> – to <b>knowing ourselves and what brought us to where we are</b>
- Marina Warner,
The <b>sensitivity and sincerity</b> with which Frank makes his case will send readers back to the originals with newfound respect
Tablet
As one reads his <b>illuminating</b> <i>Stranger than Fiction</i>, one follows the many paths of the twentieth-century novel in the company of Frank’s own prodigious reading, his intimate understanding of writers’ lives and discoveries and his deep insight into the varieties of experience a novel can create. The form itself <b>emerges with fresh splendour </b>and sends us back to the books anew
- Rachel Cohen,
'<i>Stranger than Fiction</i> is a kind of portable library, <b>a high-speed and dazzling tour </b>of what the twentieth century made of fiction, and what fiction made of the twentieth century'
- Adam Thirlwell,
AN ECONOMIST BOOK OF THE YEAR 2024
'A masterclass in masterpieces' SUNDAY TELEGRAPH
'Epic, personal, smart, wise, witty' JOSHUA COHEN
'Sizzles with passion' TOM McCARTHY
For more than two decades, Edwin Frank has introduced readers to forgotten or overlooked texts as director of the acclaimed publisher New York Review Books. In Stranger than Fiction, he offers a legendary editor’s survey of the key works that defined the twentieth-century novel.
Starting with Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground, Frank shows how its twitchy, self-undermining narrator established a voice that would echo through the coming century. He illuminates Gertrude Stein and Ernest Hemingway’s reinvention of the American sentence; Colette and André Gide’s subversions of traditional gender roles; and the monumental ambitions of works such as Mrs Dalloway, The Magic Mountain and The Man Without Qualities to encompass their times. Also included are Japan's Natsume Soseki and Nigeria’s Chinua Achebe, as well as Vasily Grossman, Hans Erich Nossack and Elsa Morante. Later chapters range from Ralph Ellison and Marguerite Yourcenar to Gabriel García Márquez and WG Sebald.
Frank makes sense of the century by mixing biographical portraiture, cultural history and close encounters with great works of art. In so doing he renews our appreciation of the paradigmatic art form of our times.