LoveReading Says
This novel has three sections: Lean, Fall, and Stand. In the first Doc, an old hand at Antarctic sojourns makes some very poor choices when he’s out on the ice near an Antarctic research station with two novices. It becomes clear that Doc has had a stroke. In the second section Doc’s wife, Anna, travels to Santiago in Chile to try and find a way through what’s happened to Doc who is in hospital there. In the third section Doc comes home to England and Anna has to become his carer. It’s a difficult thankless task, but eventually it is Doc who begins to find his own way through what’s happened to him. The powerful terror of the snowstorm in the first section is tremendous, as the three men out on the ice struggle to communicate – a wonderful metaphor for Doc’s aphasia in the next two sections. I found the whole novel absolutely riveting and it’s very likely to be in my top reads of the year.
Selected by Claire Fuller, Our Autumn 2022 Guest Editor. Click here to read the full Guest Editor Piece.
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Jon McGregor Press Reviews
'Gripping, moving, magnificent' Kamila Shamsie, author of Home Fire
'Jon McGregor has crafted a unique narrative, encompassing frozen wastes & altered interior landscapes. The most gripping piece of writing I've read in a long time:
Sit. Read. Applaud' Jarvis Cocker
'Utterly original. Jaw-dropping. The sort of book you'll think about for ages' Paula Hawkins, author of Girl on the Train
'Another McGregor novel that, beneath its serene surface, takes huge risks ... Fortunately, it's also another McGregor novel that triumphantly gets away with it' The Times
'Lean Fall Stand is a beautiful piece of work and should win a roomful of prizes. Jon McGregor writes plainly and exactly, like a poet, and the precision of his writing makes every heartbeat register' Hilary Mantel, author of The Mirror and the Light
'A spectacular book ... It does what Jon McGregor does so well: examine the widening ripples of a single event. I read it again, as soon as I'd finished'
Maggie O'Farrell, author of Hamnet
'Opens as excitingly as any work of fiction I've recently read ... It's extraordinarily tense and atmospheric - and McGregor's prose is tight as a wire' Telegraph
'Exceptional. ... So moving, and the use of language is remarkable. I absolutely loved it' David Nicholls, author of Sweet Sorrow
'A genuinely fascinating book and a troubling, riveting reading experience. A bold and masterful investigation into the weather system of the human mind' Max Porter, author of The Death of Francis Bacon
'A genuine masterpiece: poised, multilayered and full of the most astonishingly beautiful prose' Alex Preston, Observer
'McGregor's precise, well-judged prose attests to both the power of language and to the havoc created by its loss' Financial Times
About Jon McGregor
Jon McGregor is the author of four novels and a story collection. He is the winner of the IMPAC Dublin Literature Prize, Betty Trask Prize, and Somerset Maugham Award, and has twice been longlisted for the Man Booker Prize. He is Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Nottingham, where he edits The Letters Page , a literary journal in letters. He was born in Bermuda in 1976, grew up in Norfolk, and now lives in Nottingham.
Photograph © Dan Sinclair
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