- Published: 1 March 2012
- ISBN: 9780099564973
- Imprint: Vintage
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 160
- RRP: $22.99
The Sense of an Ending
The classic Booker Prize-winning novel
- Published: 1 March 2012
- ISBN: 9780099564973
- Imprint: Vintage
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 160
- RRP: $22.99
This is drama from the pen of a master wordsmith...a wise book
Bookmunch
The main pleasures of reading The Sense of an Ending are the solid, traditional ones of story and character...the desire to know who did what
Lidija Haas, Times Literary Supplement
Adroit and unnerving and Barnes's keen intellect has rarely been so apparent
Christian House, Independent on Sunday
His best attempt yet at proving that his creative urges only seem contradictory...is as satisfying as anything he's written
Christopher Bray, Daily Express
A fascinating sketch of an unglamorous and rarely-mined vein of middle-class life
Daily Mail
It gives as much resonance to what is unknown and unspoken - lost to memory as it does to the engine of its own plot. Fiction, Barnes writes in Nothing to be frightened of, "wants to tell all stories, in all their contrariness, contradiction and irresolvability". The Sense of an Ending honours that impossible desire in a way that is novel, fertile and memorable
Guardian
A masterpiece... I would urge you to read - and re-read - The Sense of an Ending
Daily Telegraph
Mesmerising... the concluding scenes grip like a thriller - a whodunit of memory and morality
Independent
A very fine book, skilfully plotted, boldly conceived... Barnes has achieved...something of universal importance
Justin Cartwright, Observer
A precise, poignant portrait of the costs and benefits of time passing, of friendship, of love. A small masterpiece
Erica Wagner, The Times
A dexterously crafted narrative...quivering not just with tension but with psychological, emotional and moral reverberation...overlaid with witty portrayal of the contemporary London scene and spot-on period evocation in harkings back to the class and sexual mores of the early 1960s... Uncovering, link by link, an appalling chain reaction of briefly wished-for revenge, almost accidental damage, and remorse that agonisingly bites after most of a lifetime, it's a harsh tale rich in humane resonances
Sunday Times
Like Henry James's The Turn of the Screw, which it resembles...its effect is disturbing - all the more so for being written with Barnes's habitual lucidity. His reputation will surely be enhanced by this book. Do not be misled by its brevity. Its mystery is as deeply embedded as the most archaic of memories
Anita Brookner, Daily Telegraph
Without overstating his case in the slightest, Barnes's story is a meditation on the unreliability and falsity of memory; on not getting it the first time round - and possibly not even the second, either. Barnes's revelation is richly ambiguous... It subverts not only the conventions of the where-are-the-snows-of-yesteryear fiction...but also the redeemed-lonely-old-man novel...and also the very notion that towards the end of our lives we see things more clearly
Evening Standard
Barnes is a cerebral novelist exploring sophisticated ideas...ancient philosophical questions, resonating through centuries of great literature. Barnes picks them up and spins them with suavity and wit that sparkles on the surface of deep and troubling thought... What is so impressive in Barnes's fiction is his ability to evoke the chaos and vulnerability that beleaguer human life, while remaining calm and lucid in the face of both. He seems a modern-day Stoic
The Times
Its brevity...in no way compromises its intensity - every word has its part to play; with great but invisible skill Barnes squeezes into it not just a sense of the infinite complexity of the human heart but the damage the wrong permutations can cause when combined. It is perhaps his greatest achievement that, in his hands, the unknowable does not mean the implausible
Financial Times
Barnes, as ever, writes very well. Yet for all the style and irony, it is the depth of powerful feeling, the emotional intelligence, the taste of remorse that brings it so close to the best of John Updike... Julian Barnes may well have written his best novel, he has certainly told a wonderful story that is all too human and all so real
Irish Times
A wonderful story that is all too human and all so real
Irish Times
Novel, fertile and memorable
Justine Jordan, Guardian
It's a terrific yarn, and as soon as you finish it you wnt to go back to the start to read it again...he combines weight and lightness again in The Sense of and Ending, a disturbing meditation on memory, remorse and regret, masked as an intriguing entertainment
Brendan Walsh, Tablet
Julian Barnes’ Man-Booker prize-winning novel has extraordinary power and emotional density
Simon Shaw, Mail on Sunday
An eloquent meditation on relationships, emotional arrogance and the discomfort of remorse
James Urquhart, Financial Times
The key to this slender, tantalizing mystery is on its opening page: what you end up remembering isn’t always the same as what you have witnessed
Katie Owen, Daily Telegraph
Might be read as a quietly suspenseful, and angry, judgement on postwar culture
Boyd Tonkin, Independent, Books of the Year
A seemingly slight work that is, in fact, possessed of almost infinite depth. It's an elegant inquiry into what we can know and how we can know it - and it's gripping too
Erica Wagner, The Times, Books of the Year
It sets off a moving meditation on ageing, regret and the unreliability of memory
Sunday Express, Books of the Year
Has rightly been praised for its economy and elegance
Margaret Drabble, Guardian, Books of the Year
Belatedly and deservedly, this was the year of Julian Barnes
Mark Lawson, Guardian, Books of the Year
Exquisitely written and deeply engaging
Lorrie Moore, Guardian, Books of the Year
Elegant verbal exactness, analytic finesse and a witty portrayal of contemporary and 1960's life complement the intricate plot
Peter Kemp, Sunday Times, Books of the Year
A worthy Booker laureate of this or any other year, our most versatile novelist...a perfect present in these last days of the book as a singular object
Philip French, Observer, Books of the Year
A worthy winner of this year's Booker prize: short, but certainly not slight, precise and insightful
Kate Cunningham, Herald, Books of the Year
This novel packed more emotion into its 150 pages than any other I have read this year
Bob McDevitt, Herald, Books of the Year
Melancholic, suspenseful and thought-provoking
Kirsty Wark, Herald, Books of the Year
Several plot twists later, what started off as a thoughtful (and fascinating) meditation on memory becomes something close to a full blown thriller
James Walton, Daily Mail
Essential reading for any writer, aspiring or otherwise
Patrick Keogh, Guardian
A meditation on memory and regret slyly conveyed through the unreliable voice of a complacent man whose past gives him a nasty surprise
Justine Jordan, Guardian
A deserving winner
Éibhear Walshe, Irish Times, Books of the Year
Masterful, gripping and, above all, surprising
Victoria Hislop, The Week, Books of the Year
Barnes has always has an ear for the bleak comedy of the first person
Olivia Cole
His art is artful, often openly so, but never showy or obvious
Colm Toibin, New York Review
Described in Justin Cartwright’s review as 'a very fine book, skillfully plotted, boldly conceived’
Guardian, Holiday Reads
I am eager to read it, though I hear it needs to be read twice to be fully appreciated
Colm O'Gorman, Independent