Mark Haddon's bestselling and multi-award-winning debut novel - one of the most talked-about books of the last decade.
Mark Haddon is a writer and artist. His bestselling novel, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time (2003) won seventeen literary prizes, was translated into 36 languages, and went on to become an award-winning stage adaptation by Simon Stephens. His most recent works of fiction include a novel, The Porpoise (2019), and a collection of fables and stories, Dogs and Monsters (2024).
Haddon is to be congratulated for imagining a new kind of hero, for
the humbling instruction this warm and often funny novel offers and
for showing that the best lives are lived where difference is
cherished
*Daily Telegraph*
The clash between Christopher's view of the world and the way it
looks to the rest of us makes this an extraordinarily moving, often
blackly funny read. It is hard to think of anyone who would not be
moved and delighted by this book, so the decision to publish it
simultaneously for older children and adults is certainly
well-founded
*Financial Times*
Brilliantly inventive, full of dazzling set-pieces, unbearably sad,
yet also skilfully dodging any encounters with sentimentality, this
isn't simply the most original novel I've read in years . . . It's
also one of the best
*The Times*
A stroke of genius, as the advantages of having a naive,
literal-minded boy in the driving seat are manifold . . . We do
learn what it might feel like to have Asperger's Syndrome
*TES*
The book gave me that rare, greedy feeling of: this is so good I
want to read it all at once but I mustn't or it will be over too
soon
*Observer*
It's pretty much flawless . . . Haddon stays compassionate to all
his characters, but not once does his story descend into treacly
pathos or easy tears. This is a high ambition fully achieved
*Evening Standard*
Supremely well-written, funny and oddly affecting
*Daily Telegraph*
Exceptional by any standards . . . When we look at the world
through Christopher's eyes we see it more clearly and understand
ourselves better. What more could you want of a book?
*The Sunday Telegraph*
Exceptional by any standards. Haddon sticks rigidly to the limits
imposed by autism without sacrificing literary viability. When we
look at the world through Christopher's eyes we see it more clearly
and understand ourselves better. What more could you want of a
book?
*Sunday Telegraph*
Mark Haddon has produced a well-executed, unusual mystery.
*GQ*
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