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Glow

Hardback

Main Details

Title Glow
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Ned Beauman
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:256
Dimensions(mm): Height 241,Width 162
Category/GenreModern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
Thriller/suspense
ISBN/Barcode 9781444765519
ClassificationsDewey:823.92
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Hodder & Stoughton
Imprint Sceptre
Publication Date 8 May 2014
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

London, May 2010. Foxes are behaving oddly, and Burmese people are going missing. A new synthetic drug, Glow, has begun to appear on the streets of London. And Raf, a 22-year-old dog-walker suffering from a bizarre sleeping disorder, uncovers a massive corporate conspiracy... and falls in love. Combining the pace, drama and explosive plot twists of a conspiracy thriller with his trademark intellectual, linguistic and comedic pyrotechnics, Glow is Ned Beauman's most thrilling, virtuosic and compulsively readable novel yet, and will appeal to fans of Irvine Welsh and Will Self.

Author Biography

Ned Beauman was born in 1985 and lives in London. He has written for Dazed & Confused, AnOther and the Guardian. His debut novel, BOXER, BEETLE was shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award and the Desmond Elliot Prize, and won the Writers' Guild Award for Best Fiction Book. Ned Beauman was picked by The Culture Show as one of the 12 Best New British Writers in 2011. His second novel, THE TELEPORTATION ACCIDENT was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize 2012 and won the Encore Award and a Somerset Maugham Award. In 2013 he was selected by Granta as one of Britain's Best Young British Writers. He was the youngest of the 20 writers featured in this once-a-decade line-up.

Reviews

Unhinged, over-whelming and brilliant ... Beauman has taste: his antennae are acutely tuned to the stylish and resonant. * Independent * A thoroughly enjoyable, playful read . . . The narrative hooks immediately, as does the language, which is often delightfully inventive. There are also surprisingly tender scenes that add depth and humour. . . . Beauman has created a truly modern thriller that is as addictive as it is inventive. * The List * Beauman writes with panache. * Daily Mail * Glow is an inventive, supercharged conspiracy thriller set in contemporary London with occasional forays to Burma and Iceland . . . Beauman is an admirably lean storyteller and the acrobatic plot flips time zones and swaps points of view with the frantic, fierce pace of a computer game. His hypnotic, dystopian portrait of an edgy, youthful London of pills, parties and pirate radio makes you long to be 20 and in the swim again. He's capable of startlingly economical lyricism - a fox's tail is a 'bic flame' - and is able to capture observational detail with such skill that it can take your breath away. Glow is a fast-paced, slickly plotted conspiracy thriller written by a talented and energetic young writer. -- Melanie McGrath * Evening Standard * Exciting , engaging and most importantly, really fun to read... effortless while also feeling sculpted with wonderful precision * Stylist * A good novel needs to immediately lure you in, taking away any excuse to seek entertainment elsewhere. On this point Ned Beauman certainly rises to the occasion...I can say, unequivocally, that Glow may mess with your head, but it is also addictively good. * The Times * Stuff so good is restores your faith in fiction... Glow is also a thrillingly literary book: every page offers sentences that are a pure pleasure to read, rhythmic and witty, full of resonant variation. This is the real deal: no turgid lyricism here... Beauman is predictably excellent at managing the sinousities of his convoluted plot. But the real pleasure of Glow is to be found, as with all Beaumans' work, in watching his lucid, informed intelligence at work on the page. Beauman is a prodigy; he can do everything a novelist needs to be able to do .. and he does it all with such style that it looks effortless... It is the work of a writer who is already, at 29, something of a master. What more can you ask for than that? * Sunday Business Post (Ireland) * It is worth taking a moment to celebrate Beauman's great originality and skill... he is playful, arresting, unnerving, opulent, rude and - above all - deliciously, startlingly, exuberantly fresh. * Guardian * Sexy and urgent * Literary Review * Refreshingly hip * Bookbag * ...an inventive supercharged conspiracy thriller... Beauman is an admirably lean storyteller... He is capable of startlingly economical lyricism and is able to capture observational detail with breathtaking skill * Spectrum, Scotland on Sunday * Glow is elevated to another level altogether by its brilliantly inventive narrative style... I can't recommend Glow enough. * Learn This Phrase * Complex themes are introduced not least tangents into neuroscience and Burmese history, but we are rarely disorientated for long. The twists when they come are unexpected and satisfying. * Observer * It's exciting to witness someone mythologizing London with such brains and humour, shards of reality strung into something both synthetic and magical. * Daily Telegraph * Beauman's writing is brilliantly funny and memorable. He doesn't just have an eye for detail but also chooses just the right words to give his observations a surreal twist. * Express * Beauman's writing is extremely readable ... also interspersed with fantastic imagery and metaphor that made me laugh out loud at times.... Wholeheartedly recommend! * Blackheath Readers * As breathlessly engrossing as any whodunnit. * Mr Hyde, Shortlist.com * Describing a Ned Beauman novel is like describing a rainbow, or the smell of a garden after a rainstorm. Yes, it's just light refracting and wet earth, but these prosy facts can never convey how beautiful, how utterly evocative they are . . . A Ned Beauman novel is a bit like a conversation with the most intellectually curious person you'll ever meet, but not the kind you'd slowly edge away from at parties . . . Just be warned: one Ned Beauman novel will lead inexorably down a rabbit hole of immediately gobbling up his other two. Tell your friends you'll be offline for a while. * The Londonist * Beauman's writing is dazzlingly inventive. * The Times * I love Ned Beauman's novels. * Philip Hensher * A singular and almost recklessly gifted, young writer. * Time * Seriously intelligent and seriously funny at the same time. * Daily Telegraph * A promising voice for the future of the written word and a force to be acknowledged in the here and now. * Dazed & Confused * Gobsmackingly clever * Vanity Fair * Undoubtedly a writer of prodigious talent * Financial Times *