______________________SHORTLISTED FOR THE WHITBREAD BEST FIRST NOVEL AWARDWINNER OF THE BETTY TRASK AWARD______________________'A first novel of formidable accomplishment ... a debut of the highest promise' - Sunday Times'No new writer can make a more stunning entrance than Candia McWilliam' - Daily Mail'An incisive debut, intelligent, scrupulously planned and full of echoes ... fascinating' - Spectator______________________Lucas Salik is a heart surgeon, renowned for performing bold experiments on other people's hearts. Ostensibly chilly, he harbours a secret obsession for his reckless and charismatic friend Hal. When Hal announces his intention to find a wife, Lucas is forced to carry out his most complex operation to engineer the marriage, setting it on a perilous path to failure.But just as things appear to be working out, Lucas starts receiving ominous letters that threaten to jeopardize his intentions, his career - and his life.______________________'Poised, startling and innovative, A Case of Knives marks the debut of an astonishingly accomplished new writer' - Anita Brookner
Candia McWilliam was born in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1955 and educated at Girton College, Cambridge. She won a Vogue writing competition in 1971 and worked for the magazine between 1976 and 1979.
Her first novel, the macabre A Case of Knives (1988), was joint winner of the Betty Trask Prize. It was followed by A Little Stranger, a disturbing tale of domestic life, in 1989. Both books won Scottish Arts Council Book Awards. Debatable Land (1994) won the Guardian Fiction Prize and the Italian Premio Grinzane Cavour for the best foreign novel of the year. The book follows the adventures of the crew of a yacht sailing from Tahiti to New Zealand, exploring each character's differing experience of loneliness and exile.
Her book, Wait till I Tell You (1997), is a collection of short stories. She is a regular reviewer for a number of newspapers.
Her latest book is What to Look for in Winter (2009).
Astonishing book with some descriptions in it that I actually wanted to write down and study again and again, and I am not usually prone to such actions. Just when you think you're securely inside a head and securely in possession of the facts, the point of view changes and you see things very differently.
Great writing with contemptible characters, like with some Iris Murdochs I struggle to love a book about these selfish, complicated people. That said, I enjoy Seinfeld so feel free to disregard this review as an ignorant outlier. I read it as I really enjoyed McWilliams's memoir and thought I'd try her fiction. Full of genius but I wouldn't hurry to pick this up again.
Nope. Not for me. Gave it a very generous day, but after half a dozen self-indulgent, boring chapters I found I really didn't care to find out what happened next.
I read this over 25 years ago and have lost my copy of it but I remember many descriptive passages so powerful that they caused me to stop reading, absorb them, and reread them. The plot was great too.