The Warlow Experiment
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- €4.99
Publisher Description
A Sunday Times fiction book of the year
'She is an original, with a virtuoso touch' - Hilary Mantel
'An extraordinary, quite brilliant book' - C. J. Sansom
'A powerful and unsettling novel' - Andrew Taylor
The year is 1793 and Herbert Powyss is set on making his name as a scientist. Determined to study the effects of prolonged solitude on another human being, he advertises for someone willing to live in his cellar for seven years in return for a generous financial reward. The only man to apply is John Warlow, a semi-literate farm labourer with a wife and six children to support. Cut off from nature, Warlow soon begins losing his grip on sanity while, above ground, Powyss rapidly becomes obsessed with Warlow's wife, Hannah.
The experiment, a classic Enlightenment exercise gone more than a little mad, will have unforeseen consequences for all included. In this seductive tale of self-delusion and obsession, Alix Nathan has created an utterly transporting historical novel which is both elegant and unforgettably sinister.
One of 2019's most high-profile hardback publications, now out in paperback.
Featured on Radio Four's Book at Bedtime
BBC History Magazine Best Historical Fiction of 2019
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Nathan's intriguing yet overlong U.S. debut tracks what happens after an experiment in late-18th-cenutry Wales goes awry. In 1793, the wealthy Herbert Powyss, seeking to "contribute something important to the sphere he so admired: natural philosophy, science," devises an experiment to have a man live in total isolation for seven years in chambers deep under Powyss's Welsh estate. The incentive is 50 per year for life, and only one man applies: the semiliterate, working-class John Warlow. Warlow is given ample comforts the same food that Powyss eats (delivered via dumbwaiter) and any book he desires. But Warlow has little interest in reading and can barely write in the journal he's supposed to keep; he's more interested in the frogs he finds in his chambers. Complications further ensue when Powyss develops an affection for Hannah, Warlow's wife. Naturally, the experiment doesn't go as planned, but the novel never picks up a full head of steam, instead remaining largely static narratively and devoting ample page space to the servants on the estate. There are provocative wrinkles such as whether it's an inevitability that Powyss was going to hate the man he is experimenting on but the story takes too long to get where it's going and doesn't fully land once it does. Nathan's novel never fully lives up to its promising premise.