Peter Carey is the author of ten previous novels and has twice received the Booker Prize. His other honors include the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize and the Miles Franklin Literary Award. Born in Australia, he has lived in New York City for twenty years.
“As big and bold as [America] itself. . . . Carey at his finest. .
. . He is a sheer magician with language.” —The Miami Herald
“A brass-band burlesque of literature and history. . . .Provokes a
reader’s delighted applause. . . . Matchlessly robust.” –The New
York Times Book Review
“Outrageous and witty. . . .Another feat of acrobatic
ventriloquism, joining Carey’s masterpieces, Jack Maggs and True
History of the Kelly Gang.” –The Washington Post
“Gorgeously entertaining and moving. . . . This is a novel of
fierce attachments, charting the proximity of beauty and terror in
the human soul.” —O, The Oprah Magazine
“Delicious. . . .A comic historical picaresque. . . .[This] book
has an eighteenth-century robustness, a nineteenth-century lexicon,
and a modern liberality.” –James Wood, The New Yorker
“Re-imagines Alexis de Tocqueville’s American journey with a verve
that is nothing short of captivating. . . . A rollicking debate
about America and its opportunities, its society and class
distinctions.” —The Denver Post
“Carey is as various, often as brilliant, and always as irreverent
as they come.” –The Boston Globe
“An exuberant, entertaining, incisive novel, full of attitude and
incident.” —Dallas Morning News
“Amusing and wise and graceful to a degree that we almost don’t
deserve.” —Salon
“An energetically intelligent novel. . . . It bristles like a
hedgehog with all of Carey’s spiky ideas. . . . There’s enough to
snag your imagination on, and to spare.” —The Christian Science
Monitor
“Carey braids his story carefully, lovingly. . . .At its heart,
Parrot and Olivier in America is a western; the simplest story in
history, sculpted down to a twinkle in a philosopher’s eye: Man’s
search for freedom.” –Los Angeles Times
“Parrot and Olivier [is]. . . . Peter Carey’s celebration of his
marvelous discovery of how to write about—this time around—our own
past.” —San Francisco Chronicle
“A dazzling, entertaining novel. . . . The language is vivid,
forceful and poetic.” —The Guardian (London)
“Parrot offers Carey an excellent occasion to create swaggering
19th century brogue—and a new vantage to explore the transformative
power of America.” —Chicago Tribune
“Peter Carey is one of today’s best writers of literary historical
fiction. . . . The novel is full of lush detail, period lingo, and
plenty of Dickensian coincidence and excitement.” —The Charlotte
Observer
“Extraordinarily allusive and joyously inventive. The numerous
themes are spiced with his gutsy carnality. . . . A great deal of
pleasure.” —The Daily Telegraph (London)
“Cranks its energy, like Don Quixote, out of the friction between
two antipodal characters. . . . Hums with comic adventure.” —New
York Magazine
“A comic, well-observed and meticulously crafted narrative. . . .
Carey deftly and humorously brings debate into the narrative but
seamlessly and organically within an immersive depiction of life
180 years ago.” —Buffalo News
“One assumes it was no simple thing for Peter Carey to give birth
to this masterful, sprawling epic. But oh, the reader is so pleased
that the effort succeeded.” —Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“Even fuller than its predecessors of allusion, contrast, and comic
contradiction. . . . It demands and repays repeated reading.” —The
Times Literary Supplement (London)
“Exquisitely written. . . . It’s a surprising, stimulating, sad,
and side-splitting deconstruction of social class, no less ‘real’
because it springs from Carey’s imagination.” —Tulsa World
“Elegant prose conveys the newness of America. . . . As usual with
Carey, echoes of Dickens resound.” —Bloomberg News
“Smart, charming and original. . . . [Carey] finds comedy in
unexpected places.” —NPR.org
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