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The Mission House

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title The Mission House
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Carys Davies
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:256
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 153
Category/GenreModern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
ISBN/Barcode 9781922330635
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Text Publishing
Imprint The Text Publishing Company
Publication Date 18 August 2020
Publication Country Australia

Description

Fleeing the dark undercurrents of contemporary Britain, Hilary Byrd takes refuge in a hill station in South India. There he finds solace in life's simple pleasures, travelling by rickshaw around the small town and staying in a mission house beside the local presbytery, where the Padre and his adoptive daughter Priscilla have taken him under their wing. As his friendship with the young woman grows, Hilary begins to wonder whether his purpose lies in this new relationship. But religious tensions are brewing and the mission house may not be the safe haven it seems. The Mission House boldly and imaginatively interrogates the fractures between faith and non-belief, young and old, imperial past and nationalistic present. Tenderly subversive and meticulously crafted, it is a deeply human story of the wonders and terrors of connection in a modern world.

Author Biography

Carys Davies' debut novel, West, was shortlisted for the Rathbones Folio Prize, runner-up for the Society of Authors' McKitterick Prize and winner of the Wales Book of the Year for Fiction. She is also the author of two collections of short stories, Some New Ambush and The Redemption of Galen Pike (published in Australia as the single collection The Travellers and Other Stories), which won the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award and the Jerwood Fiction Uncovered Prize. She lives in Edinburgh.

Reviews

'Carys Davies is a writer of immense talent.' * Colm Toibin * 'Carys Davies deserves every accolade she has received.' * Elizabeth Harrower * 'Davies' artistry is matched by her storytelling powers.' * Daily Mail * 'Carys Davies is a deft, audacious visionary.' * Tea Obreht * 'Carys Davies' enthralling fictions carry us across time and continents, and bring interior worlds to life.' * Claire Messud * 'Tender, playful, piercing, light-footed-this is an irresistible novel.' * Michelle de Kretser * 'A subtle, masterly treasure.' * Robbie Arnott * 'A compelling read. Carys Davies has an amazing gift for summoning up a place, a situation, the characters. Her skill is that of brevity, nailing a personality with a few lines of dialogue, saying most by saying least.' * Penelope Lively * 'A wonderfully written tale of subtle repetitions from multiple points of view set in India - it has the simplicity of fairy tale, the heft of fable and contains all the human sadness and joy of misfits.' * Bernard MacLaverty * 'An astonishingly assured and gripping piece of work and a worthy follow-up to West. Davies has a voice unlike any I've read: clean, otherworldly, eerily original, and capable of devastating effect.' * Julie Myerson * 'I felt, reading this extraordinary novel, that the thorough oddity of its chief characters, their strange innocence, amounts to a revolt, on our behalf too, against the stupidity, cruelty, fanaticism and bigoted violence of the world in which they more or less successfully live their eccentric lives.' * David Constantine * 'The Mission House is an absolute triumph. That rare type of book-resoundingly tender, and gently heart-wrenching. Carys Davies doesn't drop a sentence. I was deeply moved, and spellbound.' * Cynan Jones * 'Davies' lapidary prose is a marvel-she creates worlds in a few deft pen strokes.' * The Times * 'Brilliantly crafted...Having subtly prepared the ground, Davies finally springs the jaws of her plot, revealing, heartbreakingly, to us, and the tragically blinkered Hilary, what kind of story this really is.' * Daily Mail * 'A delicately political tale that keeps the real drama largely below the surface.' * Metro * 'Subtle with nuance and alive with immediacy, again adroitly using small-scale effects to enlarge understanding and extend empathy, the resulting novel is a masterly achievement.' * The Times * 'A novel about the pitfalls of human connection in contemporary India...An interesting take on a familiar trope...The Mission House truthfully reveals that the new realities of India will increasingly have their revenge on these tired old romances.' * Guardian * 'The Mission House puts [the genre of] Raj fiction to fresh purposes...the prevailing tone modulates between gentle humour and low key poignancy. The small, often dashed hopes of the under-privileged...are affectingly noted...Embroidered on a placard in the bungalow is the motto "Lean Not on Thine Own Understanding". It's a message that pervades the book. Misunderstandings and misinterpretations fatefully mesh. Sudden shifts into another's mind tilt things into unsettling new perspectives...Subtle with nuance and alive with immediacy, again adroitly using small-scale effects to enlarge understanding and extend empathy, the resulting novel is a masterly achievement.' * The Times * 'A delicately political tale that keeps the real drama largely below the surface, leaving the reader to gauge the extent of the protagonist's self-deluding solipsism.' * Metro * 'Brilliantly crafted...Having subtly prepared the ground, Davies finally springs the jaws of her plot, revealing, heartbreakingly, to us, and the tragically blinkered Hilary, what kind of story this really is.' * Daily Mail * 'This beautifully crafted story reveals the clash between old and new ways, imperial past and nationalistic present.' * Bookseller * 'Davies weaves her story with brevity and to devastating effect, drawing a portrait of an odd group of lonely people struggling to find a connection in a changing world' * Radio Times * 'No words are wasted, yet her conjuring of place and character are rich and vivid. Davies's tale feels timeless...a message of moral responsibility framed as quiet tragedy.' * The Times * 'This quiet novel, set in India at the turn of the century, explores weighty topics such as imperialism, religious intolerance and mental health but in a blessedly unassuming manner. Following middle-aged bachelor Hilary Byrd as he seeks refuge from his unfulfilled life in the UK, Davies gently excavates modern India's intersection with its history through Byrd's eyes. His relationships, including a fraught and unrequited love for his housekeeper, are deftly drawn and the characters deeply and warmly described.' * Gavin, Matilda Bookshop * '[A] jewel of a novel...Fascinating.' * Guardian * 'At first glance a simply told tale, The Mission House has a twisted brilliance that is mesmerising.' * Saturday Paper * '[An] effortlessly readable novel about vulnerable private lives being tossed around by the wild currents of history.' * Age * 'Superb.' * The Times * 'Carys Davies is unlike anyone else I have ever read. She can say in one sublime sentence what most of us struggle to come up with in a page. And The Mission House is another triumph.' * Rachel Joyce * 'Precise and wonderful...An entrancing read...The Mission House feels at once historic and contemporary, old and new, known and unknown, and in its unobtrusive way it invites its reader-as the very best writing always does-to ask questions about the world we live in and the part we play in it.' * Nation.Cymru * 'A stunning, understated novel...Told from alternating perspectives, this captivating, nuanced tale balances a pervading sense of melancholy with pockets of wry humor. Davies's masterly elegy is not to be missed.' * Publishers Weekly (starred review) * 'Beautifully done, with the same same resonant concision of Carys Davies's fine first novel, West, it's a haunting picture of colonialism's long legacy.' * The Sunday Times * 'Lightly yet deftly crafted, hovering in tone somewhere between comedy, tragedy and fable, Welsh author Davies' understated second novel considers isolated characters and their yearnings against the historical long view and looming political violence.' * Kirkus Reviews (starred review) * 'Davies creates a world that is magical yet daubed with menace. Nuanced characters, lush descriptions of South India, and an incisive look at class and religion make for a rich and layered novel.' * Booklist (starred review) * '[A] skillful drama of well-meant misunderstandings and cultural divisions. The interactions are polite and repressed, but the story is galvanised by the "passion simmering under the surface of things. Always, every once in a while, the lid blowing off, and nothing, it seemed, that anyone could do to stop it happening."' * Wall Street Journal * 'A whiff of E. M. Forster hangs over the luminous new novel from an O'Connor Prize winner. Hilary Byrd, a dissolute British man, escapes the coop of his native country on his own passage to India, where he basks in the rhythms and textures of his adventure, renting a guest house in a presbytery and forging bonds with his rickshaw driver and the Padre's daughter. And yet religious tensions stalk his safehouse in an elegant tale that probes the jagged shadows of colonialism. Davies is a writer to watch-and to savour.' * O, The Oprah Magazine * '[A] singular voice...Davies' writing is sublime...saying something about life's trajectory in a few lines...Prose to disappear into.' * Toronto Star *