The Long Take
By Robin Robertson
By Robin Robertson
By Robin Robertson
By Robin Robertson
By Robin Robertson
Read by Kerry Shale
By Robin Robertson
Read by Kerry Shale
Category: Poetry | Military Fiction | Noir Novels
Category: Poetry | Military Fiction | Noir Novels
Category: Poetry | Military Fiction | Noir Novels | Audiobooks
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$19.00
Jun 02, 2020 | ISBN 9781524711429
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Nov 20, 2018 | ISBN 9780525655220
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Nov 20, 2018 | ISBN 9780593103494
326 Minutes
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$19.00
Jun 02, 2020 | ISBN 9781524711429
-
Nov 20, 2018 | ISBN 9780525655220
-
Nov 20, 2018 | ISBN 9780593103494
326 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
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Praise
âA propulsive verbal tour de force . . . A hymn to destruction that exposes our countryâs betrayal of the American Dream in the years following World War II. [Robertson] places Walkerâs world on a continuum of postwar abusive power that still resonates today, while also reminding the reader of older instances of displacement such as the Trail of Tears and Scotlandâs Sutherland clearances. The Long Take conveys dignity upon its less than noble characters because theyâve been dispossessed by outside forces. . . . When was the last time you said of a book of poetry, âI couldnât put it down?â Well, nowâs your chance.â âSibbie OâSullivan, The Washington Post
âA remarkable work . . . I canât think of anything quite like it . . . Modern, complex, political . . . [Robertsonâs] language is functional and often exquisite . . . Though rooted in a specific time and place, The Long Takeâs larger theme is the capacity of greed and politics to turn hope into despair . . . A poem thatâs long been waiting to be written.â âWoody Haut, Los Angeles Review of Books
âAs far as books go itâs A-1. I recommend it.â âNico Walker, author of Cherry
âRobertson has cast a national, cultural, psychological and class outsider of vibrant and seedy post-war America into a palpable anti-hero eerily resonant with our contemporary world. With syncopated rhythms, staccato dialogue and jump-scenes, the book weaves dizzying, jazz-like meditations on PTSD, masculinity, betrayal and salvation by embodying, in sound, scent and sixth-sense, one of Americaâs most hopeful and devastating decades. The result is a ravishing achievement.â âOcean Vuong
â[A] lyrical masterpiece . . . Robertson has written a book that manages to be epic and elegiac, and suffused with savagery and beauty.â âMalcolm Forbes, Minneapolis Star Tribune
âA seamless and masterly sequence.â âDayton Hare, Michigan Daily
âThe wondrous story of a Canadian veteran of the second world war who washes up in New York and then Los Angelesâtold mostly in verse. Walker, the protagonist, is haunted by his experiences in combat and by memories of his youth, and pained by the neglect of the homeless in California. Probably the best novel of the year.â âThe Economist (âBooks of the Yearâ)
âBold, brilliant, filled with wonderful imagery and meticulously researched, this is as poignant and visual as classic film noir.â âIan Rankin
âSuperlative.â âJustine Jordan, The Guardian âBooks of the Yearâ
âThis book will shift something in your soul. By the time you have finished reading it, you wonât quite be the same.â âElif Shafak, Goldsmiths Prize judge
âA beautiful, vigorous and achingly melancholy hymn to the common man that is as unexpected as it is daring. Here we have a poet, at the peak of his symphonic powers, taking a great risk, and succeeding gloriously . . . The Long Take is a masterly work of art, exciting, colourful, fast-paced â the old-time movie reviewerâs vocabulary is apt to the case â and almost unbearably moving.â âJohn Banville, The Guardian
âHypnotic and wrenching . . . Robertson transforms the long take into an epic taking of life, liberty, reason, and hope in this saga of a good man broken by war and a city savaged by greed, an arresting and gorgeously lyrical and disquieting tale of brutal authenticity, hard-won compassion, and stygian splendor.â âDonna Seaman, Booklist (starred review)
âImmaculately researched . . . Walker is a superbly rounded character, and his tale one worth telling . . . Moving and engrossing.â âRory Waterman, The Times Literary Supplement
âAbsolutely stunning . . . [Robertsonâs] beautiful verse describes things better than any picture could . . . The language is astonishing.â âArifa Akbar, BBC, Front Row
âRobertsonâs deliberate, atmospheric verse narrative soars with an emphatic grandeur more usually found in symphonic music . . . As a work of art, this dreamlike exploration is a triumph; as a timely allegory, it is disturbingly profound . . . Robertsonâs The Long Take is one of the first major achievements of 21st-century English-language literature.â âEileen Battersby, Financial Times
âA blisteringly beautiful vision of America rotting in the aftermath of the Second World War . . . Robertsonâs book is stylish, daring, high concept and amazing.â âEvening Standard
âRobertsonâs The Long Take shows it is perfectly possible to write poetry which is both accessible and subtle, which has a genuine moral and social conscience without sacrificing the polished nature of the language to soundbite and clichĂ©.â âStuart Kelly, Scotland on Sunday
â[Robertsonâs] writing is a charged marriage of precision and wildness, of meticulous architecture and unbridled energy . . . writing of extraordinary sensuality . . . In this cinepoetic narrative, lyric is the long take, while the lift and fall of the feet of the wounded tell stories of hope and loss.â âFelicity Plunkett, The Australian
âRobertsonâs The Long Take shows it is perfectly possible to write poetry which is both accessible and subtle, which has a genuine moral and social conscience without sacrificing the polished nature of the language to soundbite and clichĂ© . . . A major achievement.â âStuart Kelly, The Scotsman
âA sustained tribute to the cinematic art of light and dark.â âJeremy Noel-Tod, Sunday Times
â[A] flashpoint in U.S. history, an almost perfect mirror image of the nation today . . . The Long Take remarkably captures linguistic styles of 1940s American writingâSaroyan and Steinbeck. As it progresses into the mid-50s weâre hearing Ginsberg and Baldwin . . . You will be washed in all these when you read this poem.â âTodd McEwen, Sunday Herald
Awards
Goldsmiths Book Prize WINNER 2018
Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction WINNER 2019
Booker Prize SHORTLIST 2018