Lily King is the author of the novels The Pleasing Hour, The English Teacher, Father of the Rain, Writers & Lovers, and Euphoria, which is inspired by the life of revolutionary anthropologist Margaret Mead. She is also the author of Five Tuesdays in Winter, her first collection of short stories. King is the recipient of a Whiting Writers’ Award and has twice won both the Maine Fiction Award and the New England Book Award. She lives with her husband and children in Maine.
Pretty much perfect. It's a novel about a Margaret Mead-like
character in New Guinea in the 30s, and it's so smart and rich and
alive.
*Curtis Sittenfeld, author of American Wife*
This dazzling novel bites like a tropical insect, and makes
anthropology seem more exciting than any other profession
*Emma Donogue, author of Room*
A brilliant reimagining of Mead's pioneering exploits . . . the
artfulness of her characterisation is so adept that her prose has
the force of truth.
*Daily Telegraph*
Jaw-droppingly, heart-stoppingly beautiful
*Paula McLain, author of The Paris Wife*
A taut, witty, fiercely intelligent tale of competing egos and
desires in a landscape of exotic menace . . . Exquisite
*New York Times*
Dramatic, insightful and absorbing . . . she captures the amber of
one man's exquisite longing for a woman who changed the way we look
at ourselves
*Washington Post*
Persuasive and evocative . . . Finely crafted . . . it shows a
talented writer unwilling to settle for what she already does well
and eager to give herself new challenges; her ambition is
laudable
*Los Angeles Times*
From Conrad to Kingsolver, the misdeeds of Westerners have inspired
their own literary subgenre, and in King's insightful, romantic
addition, the work of novelist and anthropologist find resonant
parallel: In the beauty and cruelty of others, we discover our
own
*Vogue*
Thrilling . . . intense, seductive, sexual, and intellectual . . .
It's grit-in-your-teeth sensuous
*San Francisco Chronicle*
Euphoria is simply one of the finest novels I've read in years
*Andre Dubus III, author of House of Sand and Fog*
I have come to expect Lily King's nuanced explorations of the human
heart, but in this novel she pulled me in to the exotic world of a
woman anthropologist working with undiscovered tribes in 1930s New
Guinea and I was totally captivated
*Karl Marlantes, author of Matterhorn*
Dazzling . . . in King's expert hands the three protagonists soon
become richly rendered characters, each with her or his own
suspenseful narrative . . . an exhilarating novel
*Boston Globe*
This impeccably researched story illuminates the state of the world
as clearly as the passion of its characters . . . a thrilling read
that, at its end, does indeed feel like 'the briefest, purest
euphoria''
*Publishers Weekly*
A small gem, disturbing and haunting
*Kirkus*
Atmospheric and sensual, with startling images throughout, Euphoria
is an intellectually stimulating tour de force
*Jane Ciabattari, author of Stealing the Fire*
Adventure and romance, danger and knowledge, desire and desolation
. . . exquisitely braided, they form the core of Euphoria . . . I'm
left breathless, excited, ready to wander and explore, a little
afraid, enamored, enlightened
*Bill Roorbach, author of Life Among Giants*
Masterful . . . A great novelist is like an anthropologist,
examining what humans do by habit and custom . . . This is a
riveting and provocative novel, absolutely first-rate
*Seattle Times*
Fresh, brilliantly structured, and fully imagined
*Andrea Barrett, author of Archangel and Ship
Fever*
Euphoria is a brilliantly written book and entirely fascinating
from start to finish
*Alice Greenway, author of The Bird Skinner*
King's novel turns an episode in the life of Margaret Mead into a
taut tale of competing egos and desires in a landscape of exotic
menace
*New York Times*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |