
Burial Rites
Description
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A BBC Between the Covers Book Club Pick
Based on actual events, Burial Rites by Hannah Kent is a haunting work of historical fiction, following the final days of a young woman accused of murder in 19th-century Iceland.
'Outstanding' - Madeline Miller, author of Circe
'Gripping, intriguing and unique' - Kate Mosse, author of The Burning Chambers
Northern Iceland, 1829.
A woman condemned to death for murdering her lover.
A family forced to take her in.
A priest tasked with absolving her.
But all is not as it seems, and time is running out: winter is coming, and with it the execution date.
Only she can know the truth. This is Agnes's story . . .
'One of the best Scandinavian crime novels I've read' - Independent
'Remarkable' - Sunday Times
'A must-read' - Grazia
Shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award
Shortlisted for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Awards
Part of the Picador Collection, a series showcasing the best of modern literature.
** Read Hannah Kent's memoir about Iceland, Always Home, Always Homesick **
Reviews / Votes
A story of swirling sagas, poetry, bitterness, claustrophobia . . . through the long countdown towards Agnes's fate, it is Kent's heart-racing imagery that lingers . . . even the bleakness of Agnes's end, its gut-churning fear, holds an exhilaration that borders on the sublime. * The Sunday Telegraph * One of the most gripping, intriguing and unique books I've read this year . . . A novel that bristles with beautiful description, that lays bare the harshness of women's lives of the period and considers the nature of justice -- Kate Mosse So gripping I wanted to rush through the pages, but so beautifully written I wanted to linger over every sentence. Outstanding. -- Madeline Miller, Orange Prize-winning author of <i>The Song of Achilles</i> A debut of rare sophistication and beauty - a simple but moving story, meticulously researched and hauntingly told. * Observer * Hannah's rendering of Agnes Magnusdottir is as vivid and authentic as Mailer's Gary Gilmore . . . She has resurrected her heroine with grace and skill; her writing style is innately lyrical . . . An amazing book. I was completely engrossed all the way through, and heartbroken at its end. -- Donal Ryan, Man Booker longlisted author of <i>The Spinning Heart</i> A remarkable achievement . . . Burial Rites will stand comparison with Margaret Atwood's Alias Grace and Peter Carey's True History of the Kelly Gang. * The Sunday Times * Gorgeous and haunting, Burial Rites will touch your heart. -- Charlotte Rogan, author of <i>The Lifeboat</i> Haunting . . . startlingly vivid . . . This is a tormented tale of love and betrayal and divided loyalties recounted with heartfelt honesty . . . An exceptional debut. -- Eithne Farry, <i>Sunday Express</i> Remarkable . . . extraordinary . . . Burial Rites is thought-provoking and often deeply moving . . . Beautifully written, this is a novel that will draw you in and touch your heart. Agnes will stay with you long after the last page has been turned. -- <i>Daily Express</i> Haunting and beautiful -- <i>Independent: </i>50 Best Beach Reads Kent is an Australian, but her beautiful first novel has the extraordinary setting of Iceland in the 1820s . . . a wonderfully strange and haunting story. -- <i>The Times</i> Spell-binding and moving, it's the kind of novel that gets under your skin, moves your blood, your heart. -- Megan Abbott, author of <i>The End of Everything </i>and <i>Dare Me</i> This compelling, ripped-from-real-life tale reminds me of Margaret Atwood's Alias Grace -- Karin Slaughter, bestselling author of <i>Kisscut</i> Hannah Kent has crafted a genre all her own. Burial Rites is both a compelling thriller and a profound meditation on a mythic landscape. -- Annabel Lyon, author of <i>The Golden Mean</i> Burial Rites is totally gripping & beautiful and has so much Nordic gloom that you feel frozen reading it. -- India Knight In nineteenth-century Ireland, convicted killer Agnes Magnusdottir is sentenced to death for stabbing her lover, but still has the power to change lives. Kent brilliantly recreates a community surviving in an inhospitable climate, and conveys the ineluctable force of one woman's personality on those around her. -- Book of the Year * Financial Times * An outstandingly good debut . . . I found myself spellbound . . . Kent has done a great deal of research and transformed its results into a work of art. * Literary Review *More details
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