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262 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2014


"[T]he only book she wholeheartedly admired... had what she wanted to call an experience of literature built into it, an inherent density of reflection on the medium in which it took place: the black backing that makes the mirror shine."
"...she found herself wondering why any book should win this fucking prize... unless it had a chance of doing what had just happened: coming back to a person when she wanted to cry but couldn't, or wanted to think but couldn't think clearly, or wanted to laugh but saw no reason to."
"'What is literature?' she began, feeling that her voice was not her own. 'What is this privilege we grant to certain verbal combinations, although they employ the very same words we use to buy our bread and count our money?'"
"The palaces have fallen into disrepair, or been turned into hotels—but I hoped that perhaps I could... preserve some of the splendour of that tradition by sharing it more widely."
"'Despite his contempt for , he couldn't help reproaching himself for a lack of cynicism: to have two books on the Short List, especially one that was so ludicrously unworthy, would have done his reputation for shrewdness and prescience no harm. 'Sometimes you have to read the judges rather than the books,' he could imagine himself saying in the long Vanity Fair profile that would one day inevitably be written about him.'"
"That was the wonderful thing about historical novels, one met so many famous people. It was like reading a very old copy of Hello! magazine."
"In England, art was much less likely to be mentioned in polite society than sexual perversions or methods of torture; the word 'elitist' could be spat out with the same confident contempt as 'coward' at a court martial... Perhaps in future generations a law would be passed allowing consenting adults to practise art openly; an Intellect Relations Board might be set up to encourage tolerance towards people who, through no fault of their own, were interested in ideas."