The Pesthouse

Author(s): Jim Crace

Fiction

This used to be America, this river crossing in the ten-month stretch of land, this sea-to-sea. It used to be the safest place on earth. America as we know it has fragmented. Its machines have stopped, its communities have splintered, its history is virtually forgotten, and the great migration has started: eastwards, through the mountains and down the perilous Dreaming Highway, to ships rumoured to sail to a land of greater promise. Into this landscape stumbles Franklin, who has left his home only to find new ties in a pesthouse perched above a valley. Margaret, suffering the early stages of plague, has been carried up from Ferrytown to recuperate or die alone. When her village is destroyed, she and Franklin set out together, compelled to leave everything they know behind them. The Pesthouse is realized with the flair, conviction and intensity for which Crace is admired all over the world. It is the story of an America adapting to a 'medieval future' without technology, without science, without social cohesion; and it is the story of how two people find strength in one another against all the odds. It is the story of an America adapting to a 'medieval future' without technology, without science, without social cohesion; and it is the story of how two people find strength in one another against all the odds. First published 2007.

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'A storyteller of unique gifts' The Times

Jim Crace is the author of Continent, The Gift of Stones, Arcadia, Signals of Distress, Quarantine (1998 Whitbread Novel of the Year; shortlisted for the Booker Prize), Being Dead (2001 National Book Critics' Circle Award), The Devil's Larder, and Six. His novels have been translated into twenty-six languages. In 1999 Jim Crace was elected to the Royal Society of Literature.

General Fields

  • : 9780330450072
  • : Pan Macmillan
  • : Picador
  • : 01 March 2007
  • : 220mm X mm
  • : United Kingdom
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Jim Crace
  • : Paperback
  • : Airside ed
  • : 320