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The Reader

On sale

29th October 2020

Price: £19.99

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Selected: Audiobook Downloadable / ISBN-13: 9781474619950

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Pre-Order THE GRANDDAUGHTER: the unforgettable story of German reunification that asks what might be found when it seems like all is lost, from the international bestselling author of THE READER, Bernhard Schlink.

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For fifteen-year-old Michael Berg, a chance meeting with an older woman leads to far more than he ever imagined. The woman in question is Hanna, and before long they embark on a passionate, clandestine love affair which leaves Michael both euphoric and confused. For Hanna is not all she seems.

Years later, as a law student observing a trial in Germany, Michael is shocked to realize that the person in the dock is Hanna. The woman he had loved is a criminal. Much about her behaviour during the trial does not make sense. But then suddenly, and terribly, it does – Hanna is not only obliged to answer for a horrible crime, she is also desperately concealing another deep secret.

Reviews

Deeply moving, sensitive enough to make me wince, a Holocaust novel, but light years away from the common run
Ruth Rendell, Sunday Telegraph
Leaps national boundaries and speaks straight to the heart . . . a moving, suggestive and ultimately hopeful work
New York Times
Schlink's extraordinary novel The Reader is a compelling meditation on the connections between Germany's past and its present, dramatised with extreme emotional intelligence as the story of a relationship between the narrator and an older woman. It has won deserved praise across Europe for the tact and power with which it handles its material, both erotic and philosophical
Independent
The Reader by Bernhard Schlink is the German novel I have been waiting for: it objectifies the Holocaust and legitimately makes all mankind responsible
Sir Peter Hall, Observer
For generations to come, people will be reading and marvelling over Bernhard Schlink's The Reader
Evening Standard
[Schlink] explores the conflict between generations, wrestling with collective guilt and individual motivation. He examines the nature if understanding and tests the limits of forgiveness. He does these things with honesty, restraint and a moral precision both unsettling and rare. The result is as compelling as any thriller
The Times
Haunting and unforgettable
Literary Review