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Lila

An Oprah's Book Club Pick
  • Author
    • Marilynne Robinson
Format
Regular price £9.99
Regular price Sale price £9.99
WINNER OF THE NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARD

AN OPRAH'S BOOK CLUB PICK

Lila, homeless and alone after years of roaming the countryside, steps inside a small-town Iowa church - the
only available shelter from the rain - and ignites a romance and a debate that will reshape her life.

'One of the greatest living novelists' BRYAN APPLEYARD, SUNDAY TIMES

'Robinson is frequently named as one of America's most significant writers . . . Her questioning books express wonder: they are enlightening, in the best sense, passionately contesting our facile, recycled understanding of ourselves and of our world' SARAH CHURCHWELL, GUARDIAN

'The work of an exceptional novelist' ROWAN WILLIAMS, NEW STATESMAN

'A sumptuous, graceful and ultimately life-affirming novel' JAMES KIDD, INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY

'Great and luminous beauty . . . a book that leaves the reader feeling what can only be called exaltation' NEEL MUKHERJEE, INDEPENDENT
  • Published: Aug 06 2020
  • Pages: 272
  • 198 x 130mm
  • ISBN: 9781844088829
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Press Reviews

  • Publishers Weekly
    A masterpiece . . . Lila is a superb creation
  • Harper's Bazaar
    One of the greatest living novelists . . . [Lila is] just as wise, moving and genuine as its predecessors
  • Neel Mukherjee

    Independent
    Robinson brings [the story] to pulsating life in prose of great and luminous beauty . . . a book that leaves the reader feeling what can only be called exaltation
  • Daily Mail
    This superb novel can only add to [Robinson's] already stratospherically high reputation
  • Cressida Connolly

    Spectator
    Lila is a really beautiful book: beautiful prose, beautiful story; morally beautiful too. After reading it the world seems more dazzling, fuller of wonder and mystery than it did before, as if you were newly in love. I wish I could persuade everyone who ever buys a book to read this one
  • Sunday Times
    Deeply moving, almost transformative . . . frank and direct, but occasionally moved to ecstasy by the spirit
  • Scotsman
    Tinged with heartbreaking beauty
  • The Times
    Although Lila revisits the characters of Robinson's previous books, Gilead, a Pulitzer prizewinner, and Home, a finalist in the American National Book Awards, and brings a certain completeness to their journeys, the book stands well on its own as a powerful search for the meaning of life as well as a touching and unlikely story of love and, ultimately, hope
  • Claire Messud

    Financial Times
    Robinson is a glorious writer . . . This novel, different in tone from its predecessors, stands beautifully alongside them
  • Tablet
    There is no one quite like this American writer, or quite as good as her . . . extraordinarily fluent and pitch perfect prose
  • Literary Review
    Measured and lyrical; the sound of this book is akin at times to the Cormac McCarthy of The Road . . . Robinson writes brilliantly about the way people dance warily around each other, never quite coinciding, stricken with longing and love
  • Rowan Williams

    New Statesman
    This third novel in the sequence is, in many ways, the most adventurous of all . . . Lila is the work of an exceptional novelist at the peak of her capacity
  • List
    Lila is a deeply affecting exploration of existence, love and the inevitability of loneliness. And although enriched by the two preceding books, it has the strength, beauty and originality to be read, enjoyed and appreciated as a standalone work. Written in beautiful, poetic prose, it's a remarkable achievement
  • James Kidd

    Independent on Sunday
    A sumptuous, graceful, and ultimately life-affirming novel
  • Observer
    Robinson has made a world so palpable and full that each book can stand alone...Taken together, these books will surely be known as one of the great achievements of contemporary literature
  • Scotland on Sunday
    Told with measured and absorbing elegance, this account of the growing love and trust between Lila and Reverend Ames is touching and convincing.
  • Daily Telegraph
    Searching and full of grace
  • Maggie Fergusson

    Intelligent Life (The Economist)
    Robinson explores eternity, and she does so in a quiet, ruminative style that takes over your heart as well as your head. Once you've fallen under her spell, she's not just mesmerising but indispensable
  • Prospect
    Robinson's writing can light up consciousness, and make even the most passing thoughts feel indelible. Her older sister in American literature is Emily Dickinson
  • List
    Lila is a deeply affecting exploration of existence and love
  • Sarah Franklin

    Sunday Express
    The Gilead novels provide insights into a people whose fates are bound to the land they live on. Iowa must be proud to have such a chronicler among them
  • Herald
    As a reader you feel very well looked after by Marilynne Robinson: you are knocked out by the weight of thought, the care, the worry she puts into her work. You find yourself wandering into vast new rooms, as if you're in a fabulous museum you've dreamt up for your own pleasure. There's really no one else writing like this today . . . Lila is just so damnably beautiful
  • Stylist
    Lila has a power beyond words
  • Mail on Sunday
    Mesmerising . . . reminiscent of the great Victorian novelists . . . Robinson's exquisitely wrought prose resonates
  • Sarah Churchwell

    Guardian
    Her questioning books express wonder: they are enlightening, in the best sense, passionately contesting our facile, recycled understanding of ourselves and of our world
  • Joan Bakewell

    New Statesman
    Subtle shifts of loyalties, strange moral priorities make [Robinson's] books compellingly powerful
  • Amma Asante

    Observer
    The giant themes and big questions that sit beneath the surface of Lila's incredibly moving story are compelling
  • Salley Vickers

    Observer
    My novel of the year can only be Lila by the inimitable Marilynne Robinson . . .my favourite living author and this once again demonstrates her remarkable gift for psychological depth
  • Naomi Alderman

    Observer
    Exquisitely observed, an ultimately optimistic journey through the corrosive power of shame to divide and distort
  • Robert McCrum

    Observer
    Lila by Marilynne Robinson is the heartbreaking conclusion to her Gilead trilogy
  • Todd McEwen

    Sunday Herald
    Lila was the book of books this year, an amazing achievement
  • The Economist
    One of the finest writers in America
  • William Leith

    Evening Standard
    Intricate and beautiful
  • Alan Spence

    Herald
    The novel of the year for me was Lila by Marilynne Robinson, revisiting the fictional Gilead of her three previous novels. The prose, as always, is magnificent, pitch-perfect, carrying a moral authority, a gravitas and a spiritual depth. There really is nobody else writing like this
  • Independent
    Robinson writes beautifully and, as a sophisticated religious thinker, asks searching questions about faith and doubt
  • Publishers Weekly
    A masterpiece . . . Lila is a superb creation
  • Harper's Bazaar
    One of the greatest living novelists . . . [Lila is] just as wise, moving and genuine as its predecessors
  • Neel Mukherjee

    Independent
    Robinson brings [the story] to pulsating life in prose of great and luminous beauty . . . a book that leaves the reader feeling what can only be called exaltation
  • Daily Mail
    This superb novel can only add to [Robinson's] already stratospherically high reputation
  • Cressida Connolly

    Spectator
    Lila is a really beautiful book: beautiful prose, beautiful story; morally beautiful too. After reading it the world seems more dazzling, fuller of wonder and mystery than it did before, as if you were newly in love. I wish I could persuade everyone who ever buys a book to read this one
  • Sunday Times
    Deeply moving, almost transformative . . . frank and direct, but occasionally moved to ecstasy by the spirit
  • Scotsman
    Tinged with heartbreaking beauty
  • The Times
    Although Lila revisits the characters of Robinson's previous books, Gilead, a Pulitzer prizewinner, and Home, a finalist in the American National Book Awards, and brings a certain completeness to their journeys, the book stands well on its own as a powerful search for the meaning of life as well as a touching and unlikely story of love and, ultimately, hope
  • Claire Messud

    Financial Times
    Robinson is a glorious writer . . . This novel, different in tone from its predecessors, stands beautifully alongside them
  • Tablet
    There is no one quite like this American writer, or quite as good as her . . . extraordinarily fluent and pitch perfect prose
  • Literary Review
    Measured and lyrical; the sound of this book is akin at times to the Cormac McCarthy of The Road . . . Robinson writes brilliantly about the way people dance warily around each other, never quite coinciding, stricken with longing and love
  • Rowan Williams

    New Statesman
    This third novel in the sequence is, in many ways, the most adventurous of all . . . Lila is the work of an exceptional novelist at the peak of her capacity
  • List
    Lila is a deeply affecting exploration of existence, love and the inevitability of loneliness. And although enriched by the two preceding books, it has the strength, beauty and originality to be read, enjoyed and appreciated as a standalone work. Written in beautiful, poetic prose, it's a remarkable achievement
  • James Kidd

    Independent on Sunday
    A sumptuous, graceful, and ultimately life-affirming novel
  • Observer
    Robinson has made a world so palpable and full that each book can stand alone...Taken together, these books will surely be known as one of the great achievements of contemporary literature
  • Scotland on Sunday
    Told with measured and absorbing elegance, this account of the growing love and trust between Lila and Reverend Ames is touching and convincing.
  • Daily Telegraph
    Searching and full of grace
  • Maggie Fergusson

    Intelligent Life (The Economist)
    Robinson explores eternity, and she does so in a quiet, ruminative style that takes over your heart as well as your head. Once you've fallen under her spell, she's not just mesmerising but indispensable
  • Prospect
    Robinson's writing can light up consciousness, and make even the most passing thoughts feel indelible. Her older sister in American literature is Emily Dickinson
  • List
    Lila is a deeply affecting exploration of existence and love
  • Sarah Franklin

    Sunday Express
    The Gilead novels provide insights into a people whose fates are bound to the land they live on. Iowa must be proud to have such a chronicler among them
  • Herald
    As a reader you feel very well looked after by Marilynne Robinson: you are knocked out by the weight of thought, the care, the worry she puts into her work. You find yourself wandering into vast new rooms, as if you're in a fabulous museum you've dreamt up for your own pleasure. There's really no one else writing like this today . . . Lila is just so damnably beautiful
  • Stylist
    Lila has a power beyond words
  • Mail on Sunday
    Mesmerising . . . reminiscent of the great Victorian novelists . . . Robinson's exquisitely wrought prose resonates
  • Sarah Churchwell

    Guardian
    Her questioning books express wonder: they are enlightening, in the best sense, passionately contesting our facile, recycled understanding of ourselves and of our world
  • Joan Bakewell

    New Statesman
    Subtle shifts of loyalties, strange moral priorities make [Robinson's] books compellingly powerful
  • Amma Asante

    Observer
    The giant themes and big questions that sit beneath the surface of Lila's incredibly moving story are compelling
  • Salley Vickers

    Observer
    My novel of the year can only be Lila by the inimitable Marilynne Robinson . . .my favourite living author and this once again demonstrates her remarkable gift for psychological depth
  • Naomi Alderman

    Observer
    Exquisitely observed, an ultimately optimistic journey through the corrosive power of shame to divide and distort
  • Robert McCrum

    Observer
    Lila by Marilynne Robinson is the heartbreaking conclusion to her Gilead trilogy
  • Todd McEwen

    Sunday Herald
    Lila was the book of books this year, an amazing achievement
  • The Economist
    One of the finest writers in America
  • William Leith

    Evening Standard
    Intricate and beautiful
  • Alan Spence

    Herald
    The novel of the year for me was Lila by Marilynne Robinson, revisiting the fictional Gilead of her three previous novels. The prose, as always, is magnificent, pitch-perfect, carrying a moral authority, a gravitas and a spiritual depth. There really is nobody else writing like this
  • Independent
    Robinson writes beautifully and, as a sophisticated religious thinker, asks searching questions about faith and doubt