Ian McGuire grew up near Hull and studied at the University of Manchester and the University of Virginia, USA. He is a founder and co-director of the University of Manchester's Centre for New Writing. His stories have been published in the Chicago Review, Paris Review and elsewhere, and his first novel was Incredible Bodies. The North Water is his second novel.
'A stunning achievement, by turns great fun and shocking, thrilling
and provocative. Behold: one of the finest books of the year'
*James Kidd, Independent on The North Water*
'McGuire delivers one bravura set-piece after another . . . The
North Water has, in places, a Conrad–Melville undercurrent, but for
the most part it is Dickens’s influence that is most keenly felt .
. . This is a stunning novel, one that snares the reader from the
outset and keeps the tightest grip until its bitter end'
*Financial Times on The North Water*
'Horrifically gripping. Such fine writing might have been lifted
from the pages of Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick’
*Independent on Sunday on The North Water*
'Terrific, seamed with pitch black humour and possessed of a
momentum that's kept up to the final, unexpected but resoundingly
satisfying scene ... Inspired'
*Stephanie Cross, Daily Mail on The North Water*
'As a storyteller, McGuire has a sure and unwavering touch, and he
has engineered a superbly compelling suspense narrative . . . As a
stylist, too, McGuire is never less than assured . . . a writer of
exceptional craft and confidence'
*Paraic O'Connell, Irish times on The North Water*
'Raw and compulsively readable . . . think The Revenant for the
Arctic Circle'
*The Millions on The North Water*
'Terse, grisly...Henry Drax, chief harpooner on board the
Volunteer, is the dark presence around whom the novel revolves and
what a presence. One thing’s for certain: like Moby Dick, this
book is not about the fish.'
*Daily Telegraph*
'This book is quite a ride . . . The powerful story and the riches
of the setting do not romanticise the past'
*Erica Wagner, New Statesman on The North Water*
'The North Water has exceptional power and energy'
*Nick Rennison, Sunday Times on The North Water*
'A vivid read, full of twists, turns, period detail and strong
characters . . . An enjoyable contrast to most literary
fiction'
*Robbie Millen, The Times on The North Water*
'Brilliant, fast-paced, gripping. A tour de force of narrative
tension and a masterful reconstruction of a lost world'
*Hilary Mantel on The North Water*
‘Riveting and darkly brilliant . . . The North Water feels like the
result of an encounter between Joseph Conrad and Cormac McCarthy in
some run-down port as they offer each other a long, sour nod of
recognition. McGuire has an extraordinary talent’
*Colm Toibin, New York Times on The North Water*
'A novel that takes us to the limits of flesh and blood. Utterly
convincing and compelling, remorselessly vivid and insidiously
witty. A startling achievement'
*Martin Amis on The North Water*
‘Death is the making of The North Water, Ian McGuire’s bloody,
gripping novel set in the middle of the 19th century aboard
the Volunteer . . . The language has a harsh, surprising
beauty that contrasts the spectacular setting with the greedy,
bankrupt men who force their way northward, armed with harpoons for
slaughter . . . Powerful’
*New Statesman on The North Water*
‘The North Water is brilliant. A fast-paced gripping story set
in a world where ‘why’ is not a question and murder happens on a
whim; but where a faint ray of grace and hope lights up the
landscape of salt and blood and ice’
*Hilary Mantel on The North Water*
‘The strength of The North Water lies in its
well-researched detail and persuasive descriptions of the cold,
violence, cruelty and the raw, bloody business of
whale-killing. The Volunteer is rotten from the outset . . .
The ship becomes a morally null universe, isolated on the north
water. There are echoes here of Conrad’s Heart of
Darkness’
*Helen Dunmore, The Guardian on The North Water*
‘McGuire delivers not only arresting depictions of bloody
destruction, but moments of fine prose that recall Seamus Heaney's
harsh music. For noirish thrills in an unusual setting,
McGuire has the goods and the gore’
*Kirkus Reviews on The North Water*
‘A dark, brilliant yarn . . . An amazing journey’
*Publishing News on The North Water*
‘Ian McGuire’s second novel is an unflinching look at what men do,
in extreme circumstances, for money, to survive, or for no reason
at all. It has quite a lot in common with TV shows like HBO’s
Deadwood and its many descendants (including Peaky Blinders), and .
. . it grips like a horror movie. The North Water is
self-consciously literary, thick with allusions to other books:
Moby Dick, obviously; Conrad; Elizabeth Gaskell’s only historical
novel, Sylvia’s Lovers; William Golding’s Rites of Passage trilogy;
Frankenstein; Dracula; McGuire’s opening sentence is an ironic
allusion to John’s gospel but it also recalls the beginning of the
novel that The North Water most resembles, Cormac McCarthy’s Blood
Meridian’
*London Review of Books on The North Water*
'Blood, blubber and appalling human violence saturate a tale of a
doomed 19th-century whaling voyage to the Arctic'
*The Sunday Times on The North Water*
'Set in the late 19th century, this is the tale of Patrick Sumner,
a former army surgeon who joins a whaler bound for the waters of
the Arctic Circle. Why would he take on such a dangerous task? He
has a secret to hide. Also worth noting is that Ian McGuire's vivid
novel is full of the smells of Victorian Hull, which include the
"morning piss-stink of just-emptied night jars", "the usual tavern
stench - farts and pipe-smoke and spilled ale", "the roaring stench
of excrement and decay"; the "residual smell of horse dung and
butchery"...I could go on'
*The Times on The North Water*
'Prompted by Colm Toibin's superb review in The New York Times, I
lost my Kindle virginity to The North Water, Ian McGuire's
chilling tale of whaling and depravity'
*Madeline Kean, Sunday Independent (Ireland) on The North
Water*
'This terse and grisly novel about the last days of the whaling
industry is joint favourite to win the Man Booker Prize'
*Sunday Telegraph on The North Water*
‘Should there be a dark horse on the [Man Booker] list, this is it.
Forget slick, cool, funny and topical, this is the kind of book
that captures the imagination, this is what fiction is about – the
power of story.’
*Irish Times on The North Water*
'McGuire approached the telling of his novel with a linguistic
panache seldom seen in contemporary British fiction'
*The Irish Times on The North Water*
‘Powerful . . . A tale of startling brutality and violence.
Undeniably gripping’
*Times Literary Supplement on The North Water*
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