We Begin Our Ascent
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- 6,49 €
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- 6,49 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
‘A dazzling debut by an exciting and essential new talent’ George Saunders, Man Booker Prize winning author of Lincoln in the Bardo
For Sol and Liz, competition is everything. On the road or in the lab, it’s all on the line.
As a young professional cyclist in the Tour de France and a geneticist on the brink of a major discovery, success looks within reach for them both – if only they can reach out and grab it.
But everything comes at a cost, whether that’s starting a family or doping to keep up with the team, and soon the worlds of drugs, cycling and family will collide, and they will be forced to decide whether the price of accomplishment is something they can afford.
In this powerful, gripping and blackly comic debut, this young couple must ask themselves: what is it we’re striving for? And what is it worth?
Reviews
‘A dazzling debut by an exciting and essential new talent: fast, harrowing, compelling, masterfully structured, genuinely moving. Reed is a true stylist and has, like James Salter before him, a gift for making a physical world that is very naturally imbued with rich metaphorical meaning. This novel is a heartening reminder of what happens when a keen intelligence is applied to a rarefied subject’ George Saunders, Man Booker Prize winning author of Lincoln in the Bardo
‘[A] powerful debut’ Observer
‘This novel derives its power from its limited focus and direct language. There are no word-glutted sentences. Reed [gives us] strong silk thread, absent pearls’ New York Times
‘Strong, lean, compact … Reed captures the rigors of competition as well as the complexities of competitive spirit … exciting’ Publishers Weekly
‘As meditative as it is thrilling’ Vanity Fair
‘An exceptional debut … Fast and smart, funny and sad, this is an outstanding sports novel, and Reed is an author to watch’ Kirkus Reviews (Starred Review)
‘Riveting … a beautifully written story of the consequences of the choices we make’ Good Housekeeping
‘Joe Mungo Reed’s unforgettable debut novel, We Begin Our Ascent, introduces us to a powerful new literary voice—as riveting as DeLillo’s or Morrison’s. On the surface, this is a book about doping in the Tour de France, but it’s really about marriage and masculinity, competition and loyalty, and a sense of aspiration that blooms a person open and simultaneously shuts him tight as a clamshell. I read it cover to cover in a gulp. Bravo!’
Mary Karr, author of The Art of Memoir and The Liars’ Club
‘A fascinating, darkly funny look at doping in professional cycling. … As the team’s problems go from bad to worse to disastrous, Reed’s wryly profound narrator uncovers insights into groupthink, dependency, and the dangers of mixing personal and professional lives’ Booklist
About the author
Joe Mungo Reed was born in London and raised in Gloucestershire. He has a degree in Politics and Philosophy from the University of Edinburgh and an MFA in Creative Writing from Syracuse University. His short stories have appeared in VQR and Gigantic. He is currently living in Edinburgh. He is working on his second novel and pursuing a PhD at the University of Manchester.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A cyclist competing in the Tour de France narrates Reed's strong, lean, compact debut novel, sharing his bruises and breakaways, cramps and collisions, and shedding light on the life of a competitor. The novel opens halfway through the race, with about two weeks left until the finish. Solomon's goal is not to win but to help team leader Fabrice win by providing pacing and protection, fetching food and water, and accelerating or falling back as needed. Solomon has trained hard for this event. His wife, Liz, a London research biologist and mother of their one-year-old son, understands ambition, dedication, and risk, and when Rafael, the team's director, asks her to deliver banned performance-enhancing substances, she agrees. Reed captures the rigors of competition as well as the complexities of competitive spirit in scenes such as when riders compare injuries en route to the hospital. With its taut, unsentimental prose, Reed's novel is both an exciting depiction of the prestigious bike race and an intimate portrait of a couple coming to terms with the cost of pursuing difficult goals and determining whether they're worth the price.