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Fiction, Historical
To the Hermitage by Malcolm Bradbury β€” book cover

To the Hermitage

by Malcolm Bradbury
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Synopsis

In October 1993, a novelist is invited to go to Stockholm and Russia to take part in what is enigmatically referred to as the Diderot Project. In Stockholm he is joined by various other members of the project-including an academic, a lustful opera singer, and a Swedish diplomat. On the journey to Russia more is revealed about the great Enlightenment writer Denis Diderot-the son of a knife maker in Langres, who went to Paris and compiled the Encyclopedia, a book that changed the world.

In alternating narratives, Bradbury brilliantly recreates the climate of the eighteenth century-as Diderot journeys to Russia at the behest of Catherine the Great for discussions on the nature of the late-18th-century world-as well as the twentieth century academic milieu.

"An exuberant, enchanting literary valedictory." (Washington Times)

"To the Hermitage reads like a love letter to the life of the mind from a man who, in his work as a writer, critic, academic and teacher has done much to contribute to the dizzying circulation of ideas." (The Independent on Sunday)

New York Times Book Review - James Shapiro

[T]he one Bradbury novel that transcends its cultural moment and may well attract a coterie of admirers and have a long and happy shelf life. . . . breaks new ground . . . a surprising final turn toward the elegiac.

About the Author, Malcolm Bradbury

Malcolm Bradbury (1932-2000) was a well-known novelist, critic, and academic whose writing students included Ian McEwan and Kazuo Ishiguro. His previous books include Eating People is Wrong, The History Man, Rates of Exchange,-which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize-and Doctor Criminale. He was awarded a knighthood in 1999.

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Book Details

Published
March 1, 2001
Publisher
Overlook Press, The
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781585671311

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